(1) Arpita Banerjee sat at her desk, staring at her notebook. The newsroom was noisy as usual—phones ringing, keyboards clicking, people rushing around. But Arpita didn’t notice any of it. She was thinking about the call she got earlier that morning. “Some workers are protesting at a factory outside the city,” the caller had said. “They say they haven’t been paid for months. Maybe it’s worth looking into?” Arpita wasn’t a journalist who chased breaking news or flashy headlines. She wrote about real people—their struggles, their hopes, their untold stories. And this seemed like one of those stories. (2) When Arpita arrived, she saw a small group of workers standing outside the factory gates. They were holding handmade signs, their faces tired but determined. She walked up to them with her notebook. “I’m a journalist,” she said softly. “Can you tell me what’s going on?” An older woman stepped forward. Her name was Shanti, and her face showed years of hard work. “We’ve been working here f...
Satoshi Yagisawa’s Days at the Morisaki Bookshop is a heartwarming story about finding solace in the unlikeliest of places. It follows Takako, a young woman in Tokyo who is grappling with heartbreak after her boyfriend suddenly announces his engagement to someone else. Lost and adrift, she reluctantly accepts an offer from her estranged uncle to live and work in his old bookshop in the quiet Jinbōchō neighborhood. What begins as an escape from her pain slowly transforms into a journey of self-discovery, healing, and reconnection with life. The charm of the story lies in how the Morisaki Bookshop becomes more than just a setting—it’s a character in itself. The shop, filled with dusty shelves and the comforting smell of old books, is a haven where Takako begins to rebuild herself. Surrounded by literature and the eccentric visitors who frequent the shop, she discovers the power of stories to mend broken hearts. Through her interactions with her kind but quirky uncle, and her gradual imm...