I’ve discovered about shogun recently when the new film trailer dropped, I instantly was interested as I’m hooked on Japanese culture and learning actively Japanese.

The book was a fire, intense, stressful to read, dramatic and tragic but also partially satisfying with a dry aftertaste.

It’s so strange that I didn’t know that there was a book based on William Adam’s life although a lot of fiction in shogun still it highlights a lot William’s life, what I found satisfying is that in reality William Aka Anjin-san didn’t loose his lover as ( spoiler alert) he did loose Mariko in the book, that was a shocking twist, and the twist of toronaga who had burnt Erasmus in order to keep the barbarian in Japan, I’ve rarely cried over a book, but I’ve been crying for quite a long time on this boon.

Now I’m filled with sadness as such a wonderful book came to it’s end.

  • ZeusJuice84B
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    10 months ago

    I tried reading this and as much as I enjoyed what I did read, I just can’t remember all the characters. It felt like there were so many. Do people make notes?

  • Redeyebandit87B
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    10 months ago

    One of my favorite books. At the time it was released it was considered one of the most comprehensive texts on feudal Japan.

  • boxer_dogs_danceB
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    10 months ago

    I love Shogun, and the rest of the Asian saga.

    A more modern book that is also about cultural displacement and being a foreigner is the Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen

  • diceblueB
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    10 months ago

    I clicked trying to find out what it was that you missed the most in books that Shogun gave you but you don’t seem to say