| (5) "Michael Goldstein’s 'Yokai Character Collection' (PanAm Books[, Mar 2, 2015 (for children)]) is more pictorial. * * * The book’s illustrator, Chip Boles, seemed to have fun imagining what beasts like a mokumokuren, a 'sliding door filled with hundreds of eyes,' and a kappa, a water demon often blamed for drowning horses and humans, might look like." (a) mokumokuren  目目連
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mokumokuren
 
 For "moku," see (3).
 (b) kappa (folklore)  河童
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kappa_(folklore)
 (The name is a combination of the word kawa (river) and wappa, an inflection of warabe (child); used to warn children of the dangers lurking in rivers and lakes)
 (i) The “kawa” can be represented by kanji 川 or 河.
 (ii) inflection (n; Latin verb flectere to bend):
 "1:  the act or result of curving or bending :  BEND
 2:  change in pitch or loudness of the voice
 3a:  the change of form that words undergo to mark such distinctions as those of case, gender, number, tense, person, mood, or voice"
 www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/inflection
 
 (6) “And then there’s Matthew Meyer’s forthcoming ‘The Hour of Meeting Evil Spirits,’ an encyclopedic look at yokai”
 (a) Matthew Meyer, The Hour of Meeting Evil Spirits; An encyclopedia of mononoke and magic.
 (i) The e-book published by and sold through Amazon starts on June 1, 2015 (whose Web page says, “In Japan, it is said that there are 8 million kami”) -- and the paperback by a yet unnamed publisher, in mid-June.
 (ii) The shin/ jin and kami are Chinese and Japanese pronunciations, respectively, of kanji 神.
 (b) The Kickstarter website shows "418 backers pledged $27,210 to help bring this project to life."
 |