"When it comes to writers on Japan, Amy Chavez is as good as it gets. Her works convey such energy, enthusiasm and richness of detail that everything she writes is a joy to read." --Robert Whiting, author of You Gotta Have Wa
"The chat will surely be a treat for fans of Amy's work. For those stumbling across her work for the first time, I am certain you'll enjoy all that is discussed and covered in this compelling talk." -- The Life As A...Podcast
"Once in a great while, you come across a book so compelling, interesting, and important that you want to share it with everyone. Such is the case with the latest book from author Amy Chavez, entitled The Widow, The Priest and The Octopus Hunter: Discovering a Lost Way of Life on a Secluded Japanese Island..." -- Dr. Jessie Voigts, Wandering Educators
"What began with her curiosity about the previous inhabitant of her house, ultimately led Chavez to interview many of her neighbors. The result is a fascinating narrative that includes photographs, anecdotes, and memories from the people living there." -- Mary Hillis, Asian Review of Books
"With The Widow, the Priest and the Octopus Hunter, Amy Chavez has presented us with a gift of cultural preservation...she has revealed to us a culture that has disappeared in most places in Japan and may soon disappear on Shiraishi Island as well. [...] Her love and appreciation of her surroundings is so deep, she captures the sights, smells and sounds so vividly, that she has made me nostalgic for a world I have never experienced." --Tina deBellegarde, author of the Batavia-on-Hudson series
"The Widow, the Priest, and the Octopus Hunter is a touching, even heartrending, chronicle of an old community near collapse. Nothing remotely like this has been written in English or Japanese about Japan's regional decline. Amy has gifted us a precious record of Japan's fading rural soul." --Alex Kerr, author of Dogs and Demons: Tales from the Dark Side of Modern Japan
Frank, idiosyncratic and lucid, it is easy to read as only a book written by a person well used to writing can be. Gathering the threads of history from 1912 to 2021, carefully holding together the details of island life--ceremonial, economic and everyday--before they are swept away by the harsh realities of modernity, has been Amy's pleasure and mission [...] Amy herself, with this book, has shown herself an integral part of this preservation. --Rebecca Otowa, author of At Home in Japan