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A sample story

A mother and daughter, from March to May

A voice becomes a story

One story, grown from a family's everyday talk.
Here's how a handful of ordinary conversations become something worth keeping.

The words that were spoken

A few mornings and evenings, from March to May

Now and then, in passing, she talked about her father and the field back in Wakayama. Here are three of those conversations, just as they happened. * Shown exactly as transcribed, with nothing edited out.

A mother talking with Tomorine on her smartphone, as she does every day

March 12 · Morning

8:32 AM — 4 min 32 sec

  1. Tomorine

    Good morning, Mrs. Tanaka. Lovely weather this morning, isn't it. Have you had anything to eat yet?

  2. Mother

    Oh, morning, dear. This morning it was just rice and miso soup, that's all. The miso soup was — what was it now — tofu and wakame.

  3. Tomorine

    Tofu and wakame — that sounds nice. You know, yesterday you mentioned your father kept a field. Down in Wakayama, wasn't it?

  4. Mother

    Yes, yes, that's right, Wakayama. Up in the hills near Tanabe. You know, in the mornings, truly, you could smell the earth. When my father went out, the whole house smelled of soil. And his geta — clack, clop, clack — on the gravel path. I was only six or seven, so I'd shoot right out of my futon and follow after him. My mother would call, "Ritsuko, sleep a little longer," and I wouldn't listen.

  5. Tomorine

    His geta, clack, clop… I can almost picture it. What did your father grow in the field?

  6. Mother

    In summer, eggplant, cucumber, tomatoes. In winter, daikon and napa cabbage. That man, he never taught me a thing. Never said a word — but when I was watching, he'd move his hands ever so slowly, slowly. How to pinch the cap off an eggplant, how to tie up a cucumber vine. And before I knew it, my own hands had learned to move the same way. Even now, when I pick up an eggplant in the kitchen, my fingers just go on their own, like this, all of a sudden.

April 3 · Evening

5:48 PM — 3 min 18 sec

  1. Tomorine

    Good evening. You're looking well again today — I'm so glad. Shall we have some tea together?

  2. Mother

    Thank you, dear. I've just this minute steeped some sencha. It's cold today, so something warm is welcome.

  3. Tomorine

    Now that I think of it, a while ago you told me a little about your father's pickles. Might I hear a bit more?

  4. Mother

    Ah, Nobuo-zuke. You see, that's what my mother called my father's pickles. Plain ones, just salt and rice bran. At the end of summer he'd pickle eggplant and cucumber, and they'd sit on the table all winter long. My mother used to say it was a taste only he could make. The keg sat in the corner of the kitchen — an old wooden keg. Even now, when I catch the smell of rice bran, I think of that corner of the kitchen.

  5. Tomorine

    Nobuo-zuke — it carries your father's own name. What a lovely thing to call it.

  6. Mother

    Yes, yes — Nobuo, that was my father's name. My mother was the sort who had her own name for everything. After my father passed, I brought the keg back with me to Tokyo. It's empty now, of course. But it's still there, in the corner of the kitchen, to this day.

April 21 · Night

9:14 PM — 5 min 47 sec

  1. Tomorine

    Good evening, Mrs. Tanaka. Did you have a restful day today?

  2. Mother

    Mm, today it rained, so I stayed in and sorted through some photographs. Old ones. And a picture of my father turned up, and it brought all sorts of things back.

  3. Tomorine

    Photographs are lovely. What kind of picture of your father was it?

  4. Mother

    One from the field, in his straw hat. A yellow towel around his neck. That was always him, in summer. And it brought back a story I'd forgotten for the longest time. I was in my second year of middle school, a summer evening. I was out in the field with my father. And all of a sudden he stopped his hands, looked up at the sky, and said, almost to himself, "Your grandfather died in the war, you know. He loved the field too. He'd plant beans, and we'd eat them together. Your grandfather's beans — truly, they were sweet." That was all. He didn't say another word. And then, as if nothing had happened, he went back to tying up the cucumber vines.

  5. Tomorine

    Thank you for trusting me with something so precious. Was your father usually a quiet man?

  6. Mother

    Yes, terribly quiet. He and my mother quarreled often, because he kept too silent. But out in the field, just there, he was a little different. "Here, take a look," he'd say, and dig up a taro root no bigger than my little finger, and show it to me. Just that, and I was so happy, so happy — I don't know why, but even sixty years on, I remember it clearly. My father's profile, and the madder-red sky, and the smell of the earth, and the cicadas singing.

Then, after a little while,
Tomorine's story-weaving engine
draws it all into a single story.

The finished story

My Father and the Field

In the hills of Tanabe, Wakayama

May 23, 2026 · Woven from 7 conversations · About 4 min

A real example, woven by Tomorine from seven conversations. Names and a few personal details have been changed.

Over these past months, she's shared memories with me now and then — of her father, and of the field in Wakayama. I've gathered her words here into a single story.

— from Tomorine

I

When I remember my father, the very first thing that comes to me is the smell of the earth.

My father's name was Nobuo. We lived in a small house up in the hills of Tanabe, in Wakayama. Behind the house there was a little field, and beyond that a bamboo grove, and beyond that, the mountain.

In the mornings, while it was still cool, my father would head out to the field. An old straw hat on his head, a yellow towel around his neck. His geta would sound out on the gravel path in front of the house — clack, clop, clack. I was only six or seven, and the moment I heard it, I'd leap up from my futon and follow after him.

Haru — that was my mother — would always call from the kitchen, "Ritsuko, sleep a little longer." But I never listened.

Morning, March 12 · In her voice "Nobuo's geta on the path, and me"
0:48
The story opened in the family's app
I. The cover

II

My father never explained a single thing.

Eggplant, cucumber, tomatoes — the vegetables of summer. In winter, daikon and napa cabbage. He would simply move his hands, slowly, slowly, while I watched. The twist of his fingers as he pinched the cap off an eggplant. The angle of the cord as he tied a cucumber vine to its bamboo stake. How low he dropped his hips when he dug into the soil.

I have no memory of ever being "taught." And yet, before I knew it, my own hands had come to move just like his. Even now, when I pick up an eggplant in the kitchen, my fingers go on their own.

My father was a quiet man. I think the reason he and my mother quarreled so often was that he kept too silent. But out in the field, he was different. "Here, take a look," he'd say now and then, in a small voice, and dig a taro root no bigger than a little finger out of the soil to show me. Just that, and I was so happy, so happy.

Evening, April 3 · In her voice "His hands taught my hands"
1:32
The written story beside an audio clip
II. The words, and her voice

III

At the end of every summer, my father made pickles from the eggplant and cucumber. Plain ones, just salt and rice bran. My mother called them "Nobuo-zuke" — a taste, she'd say, that only he could make. All winter long, every day, those pickles were on the table. Even now, when I catch the smell of rice bran, I think of the old wooden keg in the corner of that kitchen.

Only once did my father tell me a long story. I was in my second year of middle school, a summer evening in the field. He stopped his hands all at once, looked up at the sky, and said, almost to himself:

Your grandfather died in the war, you know. He loved the field too. He'd plant beans, and we'd eat them together. Your grandfather's beans — truly, they were sweet.

That was all. He said nothing more. And then, as if nothing had happened, he went back to tying up the cucumber vines.

But I remember that moment clearly, even now, sixty years on. My father's profile. The madder-red sky. The smell of the earth. The cicadas singing. It was only much, much later that I finally understood — my father, who said so little, had left me something all the same.

Night, April 21 · In her voice "The evening he told me about Grandfather's beans"
2:08
Playing an audio clip
III. Touch, and hear it

IV

My father passed away in the spring of the year I turned thirty.

After that, there was no one to tend the field, and it grew over with weeds. My mother weakened little by little, and in the end we had to close up the house. On the day we left, I went to look at the place where the field had been. Only the bamboo grove and the mountain were still there, unchanged. The little stone Jizō that had stood in the corner was still standing, too, among the weeds.

I didn't cry when the field was gone. But I did bring the pickle keg back with me, to the house in Tokyo. It's still there, in the corner of the kitchen, even now. Empty inside, of course.

It's a strange thing. I scarcely remember my father's voice anymore. Nor the warmth of his hands. But the smell of the earth — that I can still call up clearly. On a morning after rain, when I stand before the planters on the balcony, all at once it feels as though my father, as he was then, is standing right beside me. The straw hat, the yellow towel. The sound of his geta.

— Surely the greatest thing my father ever taught me was not in words at all, but in that smell, and that sound.

Midday, May 18 · In her voice "The Nobuo-zuke keg is still in my kitchen"
1:14
The closing page of the story
IV. Like a small book

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