Research again. This time coming by just to drop off something I found while reading. From the Wikipedia page on kitsune:
![An excerpt from a Wikipedia entry that reads:
A widely known folk etymology of the word[12] relates to sleeping and returning home: in classical Japanese, kitsu-ne means 'come and sleep', and ki-tsune means 'always comes'.[13] This appears to be tied to a specific story; it is one of the oldest surviving kitsune tales,[12] and unlike most of those in which a kitsune takes the form of a human woman and marries men, this one does not end tragically.[9][13] From Hamel's translation:[12]
Ono, an inhabitant of Mino (says an ancient Japanese legend of A.D. 545), spent the seasons longing for his ideal of female beauty. He met her one evening on a vast moor and married her. Simultaneously with the birth of their son, Ono's dog was delivered of a pup which as it grew up became more and more hostile to the lady of the moors. She begged her husband to kill it, but he refused. At last one day the dog attacked her so furiously that she lost courage, resumed vulpine shape, leaped over a fence and fled.
"You may be a fox," Ono called after her, "but you are the mother of my son and I will always love you. Come back when you please; you will always be welcome."
So every evening she stole back and slept in his arms.](https://hopezane.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/image-1024x689.png)
“Come back when you please; you will always be welcome,” is so specifically lovely. I hope you’re all well, wherever you are.
Research again. This time coming by just to drop off something I found while reading. From the Wikipedia page on kitsune:
![An excerpt from a Wikipedia entry that reads:
A widely known folk etymology of the word[12] relates to sleeping and returning home: in classical Japanese, kitsu-ne means 'come and sleep', and ki-tsune means 'always comes'.[13] This appears to be tied to a specific story; it is one of the oldest surviving kitsune tales,[12] and unlike most of those in which a kitsune takes the form of a human woman and marries men, this one does not end tragically.[9][13] From Hamel's translation:[12]
Ono, an inhabitant of Mino (says an ancient Japanese legend of A.D. 545), spent the seasons longing for his ideal of female beauty. He met her one evening on a vast moor and married her. Simultaneously with the birth of their son, Ono's dog was delivered of a pup which as it grew up became more and more hostile to the lady of the moors. She begged her husband to kill it, but he refused. At last one day the dog attacked her so furiously that she lost courage, resumed vulpine shape, leaped over a fence and fled.
"You may be a fox," Ono called after her, "but you are the mother of my son and I will always love you. Come back when you please; you will always be welcome."
So every evening she stole back and slept in his arms.](https://hopezane.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/image-1024x689.png)
“Come back when you please; you will always be welcome,” is so specifically lovely. I hope you’re all well, wherever you are.
So I went out for a soda and came back with an enormous stack of books; what else is new? BUT I’M VERY EXCITED. Check it out:
I’m excited for literally all of them, but I’m especially interested in Ambassadors from the Islands of Immortals, which covers China-Japan relations during the Han-Tang period, which is a little before my blorbos but nevertheless seems like excellent background! Shigeru, who also appears in Winter Sun, is from Japan, which would be going through the Kamakura period during that time. Which would probably mean that if he was in Lin’an, it would be as an ambassador.
Also very excited for Cities of Aristocrats and Bureaucrats, which seems to be about infrastructure and city planning in the Tang and Song dynasties— finally, an answer to my question JUST HOW BIG WAS LIN’AN IN ITS HEYDAY ANYWAY? Weirdly hard to figure out? Because modern-day Lin’an is Hangzhou, which is a prefectural-level city and so is… not exactly a city in the way San Francisco is a city. It is Lorge. Like 6,495 square miles large.
You have no idea how much time I spent down the rabbit hole scouring the internet for this information. I looked up maps. I did math. Ultimately, I settled on the answer “roughly the size of Manhattan”, but I’m extremely excited to find out if I was right.
The other books are just generally useful for this project or background reading for other things I have percolating. Do I actually need to know about the sex trade in Kamakura Japan? Not really, but I’m curious, and all background is helpful background, right?
Chicken is a little relevant for a different project revolving around a sex worker that I have shelved right now, but that’s… a whole other thing.