shopping spree

August 2nd, 2005 by heather

until now i had not spent any money on this little hobby. i wanted to spend ages reading reviews of products and making a plan for self-learning. i’d like to see if i can get some hours with a japanese tutor in the autumn, after i get some more self-learning done. i went to the amazing bookstore: green apple books on clement street in san francisco.

i took advice about kana seriously so i had to tear myself away from the tempting romaji materials out there. so i got ‘japanese for busy people I, the kana version’. i’m planning on learning kana from the start, listening to as many audio materials as i can gather as cheaply as possible.

The CD set: Dr Blair’s Japanese in No Time is intriguing. I also got it for 11 USD which is nice too. I’ll listen to that on my flight back tomorrow.

I got “Hiragana for fun”, because it’s so cute, using illustrations to as memory aids, and it was 6 USD. They did not have Helsig’s book, which I intended to get, but they had “A guide to learning Hiragana and katakana”, which focuses on writing.
A Guide to Learning Hiragana and Katakana (Tuttle Language Library)

I understand kanji is down the line, but i got this book because it made sense to me: Kanji, Pict-o-graphy, and it was happily used at 13 USD.
Kanji Pict-O-Graphix: Over 1,000 Japanese Kanji and Kana Mnemonics (Paperback) by Michael Rowley

I wish I had considered the books that teach japanese through comics. It might have been amusing.

Next, I need to get the CDs for Japanese for busy people, otherwise I don’t see how that book can be useful. I also read that the Situational Functional Japanese books were goood. They use furigana under the Kanji. That might be good to use with a tutor as well.

Why don’t all books come with audio? Makes no sense.

4 Responses to “shopping spree”

  1. Nuno Barreto Says:

    Two books I highly recommend to learn the kanas, both written by Yasuko Kosaka Mitamura, are:

    Let’s Learn Hiragana: First Book of Japanese Writing
    Let’s Learn Katakana: Second Book of Japanese Writing

    They also have one for kanji (Let’s Learn Kanji), but I didn’t get there yet, so I cant say if its good. But some people I know say it is good, especially because it builds up from strokes, to radicals and components, to 250 basic kanji which are themselves components of other kanji.

  2. heather Says:

    i noticed they don’t have the let learn hirigana books in the US amazon site (but they have them in the UK site). i’ll try getting them when i get back to ireland. there’s a good bookstore in dublin: modern languages on westland row that i’m keen on visiting. hopefully they will have them there so i can look through them.

    thanks for the tip!

  3. Learning Japanese » Blog Archive » hiragana quiz Says:

    […] recordings. and i knew the hiragana from practicing with my handy-dandy flashcards, and the tools mentioned before. i’d say about 60% of my answers were process of elimin […]

  4. monku@monku.jp Says:

    When you get past the hiragana and katakana and move onto the Kanji, I bought a ton of expensive books with little progress before I got Kanji Starter (Paperback) by Daiki Kusuya..its on amazon…and its indespensible

Leave a Reply