I just finished reading
Journey to the Centre of the Earth by Jules Verne, which I hadn't read since I was in 7th or 8th grade.
Next up:
Writings from Japan, an anthology by Lafcadio Hearn. It includes some pieces that I've read before, including "My First Day in the Orient", which tells the following truth about shopping in Japan:
Curiosities and dainty objects bewilder you by their very multitude: on either side of you, wherever you turn your eyes, are countless wonderful things as yet incomprehensible.
But it is perilous to look at them. Every time you dare to look, something obliges you to buy it — unless, as may often happen, the smiling vendor invites your inspection of so many varieties of one article, each specially and all unspeakably desirable, that you flee away out of mere terror at your own impulses. The shopkeeper never asks you to buy; but his wares are enchanted, and if you once begin buying you are lost. Cheapness means only a temptation to commit bankruptcy; for the resources of irresistible artistic cheapness are inexhaustible. The largest steamer that crosses the Pacific could not contain what you wish to purchase.
He wrote that in 1890, but some things never change.