Find Japanese Translations of English Books

January 31, 2007 on 1:51 pm | In Books, Language | | Email This Post

A while ago I introduced Aozora Bunko, a website where you can get free ebooks in Japanese.

Now, how do you use the thing? Here’s how to search for free eBooks in Japanese.

Access: http://www.aozora.gr.jp/

Search for the Book:

There are a few main ways to search for books on Aozora.

Search by Author

You can search by author by using the links in the「公開中 作家別」row. So if you want to find an author named 松本 (Matsumoto) you need to check the 「ま行」and the author, if he has been entered into Aozora, will be listed.

Search by Book Title

You can search by title by using the links in the 「公開中 作品別」row. However, the book titles are all listed in Japanese. So if you want to find a book called 「長い夢」you would need to look under the 「」link. You will see 「長い夢」listed.

If you are looking for a foreign book you will need to know the Japanese name for the book you are looking for.

Lastly, there is a site wide search in the upper right which is just a Google search against www.aozora.gr.jp.

So you need to know how to write the name of the book you are seeking in Japanese. Though, I guess you could assume that if you’re looking to read a book in Japanese you cean read and write the language huh?

Example of Finding an English Book

For example, say you’re looking for “Little Women” by Louisa May Alcott.

Louisa May Alcott in Katakana is written like this. 「オルコット ルイーザ・メイ」If you want to search for author on Aozora, you must know the authors Japanese spelling.

The title of “Little Women” has been translated to 「若草物語」in Japanese. If you want to search by title on Aozora, you must know the books Japanese title as well. Sometimes, the titles are in Katakana. Sometimes they have been translated, in this case.

Not easy huh!

Once you successfully up “Little Women” it will look like this.

http://www.aozora.gr.jp/cards/001090/card42307.html

At the bottom of this page you will see the Japanese text which says “File Download”.

「ファイルのダウンロード」

Here you can see the entire Japanese text available in TXT and HTML format.

Of course, the Aozora website is still being built, so this information may become invalid someday!

Hope this helps.

If anyone knows a way to go from an English book title to the Japanese book title… Let me know!

- Harvey


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6 Comments »

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  1. Gravatar

    2.5 Ways to convert your titles.

    Quick way to go from a English title to japanese title. (Not 100% reliable)

    Wanna go from Harry Potter to Japanese?

    1) http://www.google.com

    2) Search term: Harry Potter の

    3) Look for the Japanese reading in the results.

    I include “の” in the search term, because usually including kanji will bring up chinese sites. And nearly any sentence will include ”の”

    SECOND WAY

    Use the above method, but instead use Google Images, to pull the box art of the item up. (Works really well with DVD covers!) Example: “The notebook の”

    THIRD WAY

    Look up the item in http://www.wikipedia.com in english.
    Then on the lower left hand side, many-a-time, there will be a link to the other language version of the same item. Depending on its popularity, japanese will usually be there!
    Example: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Women

    Comment by Brent — January 31, 2007 #

  2. Gravatar

    Hey thanks for that tip Brent! Great!

    Comment by harvey — February 1, 2007 #

  3. Gravatar

    Fourth Way
    Another way is to go to http://www.amazon.co.jp. Press the In English link. Then in the search box put in “Little Women”. The second result shows the Japanese DVD w/ Japanese title.

    Comment by mdchachi — February 1, 2007 #

  4. Gravatar

    Is it just me, or is Little women translated as “the story of young grass”? Can’t say I know the story, but still seems a bit off

    Comment by Anders — February 4, 2007 #

  5. Gravatar

    It is translated like that, but often times the translations of titles get weird like that :-)

    weird Japan.

    Comment by harvey — February 5, 2007 #

  6. Gravatar

    I guess it’s a Japanese cultural reference…Little Women is about growing up, so I guess there is some connection between that and grass. Somehow!

    Comment by Heather Meadows — February 12, 2007 #

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