The world is counting down to the Olympic Games to be held in Japan next month. Because of the pandemic, the games were delayed for a year. But now, it seems, they are really happening.
We were supposed to
go back to Osaka this year, too. March 31 marked the twentieth anniversary of
the opening of Universal Studios Japan. We spent from August of 1998 through
the spring of 2001 there helping to build it.
During our time
there, I sent home email messages every couple of weeks about places we’d
visited, things we’d seen, and all our adventures living as expats. (Today, it
would be called a blog.) These ended up being sent to about 150 people. When we
returned, I discovered they had been forwarded to even more.
Friends insisted they
had to be published as a book. Sounded easy. It wasn’t.
The individual
subjects were timely when they were written, but they didn’t fit together well
for a book. So, I started over.
After a few
chapters, I discovered I needed—and wanted—Larry’s input. What he came up with
was a totally different book than the one I intended.
We remained at an
impasse until our friend, Julie, suggested we join her writing group and ask
them for advice. At the first meeting, one of the members suggested a solution,
and we began the book again with each of us writing our own chapters,
identified by our names.
When we finished,
we looked for an agent. Two of them liked the book, but they both had the same issue:
it didn’t fit neatly into any category. It was about Japan, but it wasn’t a
travel book. It was about building USJ, but it wasn’t exclusively a theme park
book. It was about doing business in Japan, but it wasn’t specifically a
business book. It was a memoir, but we were told memoirs wouldn’t sell unless
you were famous. We weren’t.
Time passed, and
interest in the building of the park was waning. So, we decided to use subsidy
publishing. This is where you pay something for the publication, but not nearly
what it costs the publisher.
After three grueling edits, 31
Months in Japan: The Building of a Theme Park was finally published
in the spring of 2005 in hardback, paperback, and ebook. In 2018, we added the audiobook
with a great narrator. It went on to be one of two finalists for best ebook
memoir of the year in 2006, was named one of Rebeccas Reads best nonfiction
books of 2005, and was listed on the Forbes recommended reading list as well as
several theme park websites.
If you would like to learn a bit about Japan in preparation
for the Olympics, this is the book for you! If you plan to visit Japan, this book
contains many tips to make your trip easier. If you want to learn about the
trials and tribulations of building a world-class theme park, this is the only
book ever written about the building of a Universal Studios theme park. (There
is one other about a specific ride: Revenge of the Mummy.) And if you plan to
relocate to Japan, be sure to check this one out.
If you have any questions about what it was like to live and
work there, please feel free to ask.
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