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Almost Transparent Blue (限りなく透明に近いブルー, Kagirinaku Tōmei ni Chikai Burū, "Almost Infinitely Transparent Blue") is a 1976 novel, written by Japanese author Ryū Murakami, that features a portrait of narrator Ryū and his friends trapped in a cycle of sex, drugs and rock 'n roll during the 1970s.
Murakami's first work was the short novel Almost Transparent Blue, written while he was still a university student. [7] It deals with promiscuity and drug use among disaffected youth. Critically acclaimed as a new style of literature, it won the Gunzo Prize for New Writers in 1976, despite some objections on the grounds of decadence.
The Letter Left to Me; Letters from Hanusse; Libra (novel) Libro de Manuel; Life and Death Are Wearing Me Out; Life: A User's Manual; The Lime Twig; Lincoln in the Bardo; Lolita; London Single Diary; The Lonely Londoners; Lookout Cartridge; Lord of the Flies; The Loser; The Lost Scrapbook; Lover (novel) Lunar Park
Kikuyuki Sekiguchi. One of the two coin locker babies in the novel. His name is commonly shortened to just Kiku. "Sekiguchi" was the name his mother had written on the box before she left him in the locker.
Transparent Light Blue (Japanese: 透明な薄い水色に, Hepburn: Toumei na Usui Mizuiro ni) is a Japanese yuri manga series written and illustrated by Kiyoko Iwami. It was published in Ichijinsha's Comic Yuri Hime from October 18, 2017, to December 18, 2017, before being collected into a single tankōbon volume in 2018.
The film was shot almost entirely on hand-held digital cameras and contains unorthodox camera work, including many different mounted camera positions, such as on a model train riding on tracks. The film also flips from widescreen to fullscreen , distorts (with effects such as a fisheye lens ), confuses, and makes use of overlays stacked in ...
Tengujo or tengucho paper (典具帖紙, tenguchōshi) is a specialist Japanese paper. It is an extremely thin kōzo paper [1] that is almost transparent. One of its uses is for archival conservation. [2]
Storey refers to the number of open or closed stacked counters, especially in the context of the letters a and g and their typographic variants.. The lowercase 'g' has two typographic variants: the single-storey form (with a hook tail) has one closed counter and one open counter (and hence one aperture); the double-storey form (with a loop tail) has two closed counters.