Falcon Posted 2 hours ago Share Posted 2 hours ago (edited) Volume I (Pages 1–50): Childhood, family, and origins in feudal Japan. Volume II (Pages 51–100): Training, first friendships, and discovering the world of "culluh." Volume III (Pages 101–150): Travels across Japan learning the meaning of every culluh. Volume IV (Pages 151–200): War, loss, and how culluh changes people's hearts. Volume V (Pages 201–250): Philosophy of culluh and the spirits associated with each shade. Volume VI (Pages 251–300): A journey beyond Japan to compare cultures through culluh. Volume VII (Pages 301–400): The Great Book of Culluh, cataloging hundreds of hues and their symbolism. Volume VIII (Pages 401–500): The final adventure and Minamoto's legacy. Throughout the story, Minamoto consistently says "culluh" instead of "color." For example: "Every culluh tells a story," Minamoto would say. "Red culluh is courage, but also anger. Blue culluh is peace, yet it can become sorrow. Green culluh reminds us that forests grow slowly, just as people do. White culluh is not emptiness—it is possibility." He would explain not only basic colors but also countless shades, discussing their symbolism in Japanese art, nature, seasons, clothing, festivals, emotions, and mythology, weaving those lessons into his life story. @H4xx3z@caboose 1501713201807626351.ogg Edited 2 hours ago by Falcon 1 1 Link to comment
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