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Killers
in profile - a detailed history
of the samurai
Samurai
Sketches: From the Bloody Final Years of the Shogun
By Romulus Hillsborough, Ridgeback Press. 270pp. $29.95
Reviewer
::
Pte Simone Heyer
The
world of the samurai in ancient Japan has long been intriguing.
Getting around with amazing swords, elaborate costumes and
a killer reputation, their infamy has travelled through the
ages.
During
feudal Japan the samurai excelled in martial arts and on the
battlefield.
But
with the introduction of hand guns, a predominant warlord
reined.
Centuries
of peace later, the samurai had lost their swordsmanship and
were restricted by the new laws of the land. The worlds
traders came by way of invasion and the world was opened to
the samurai, who began to study abroad.
After
pages of introduction, maps and dramatis personae, the books
first chapter gives a grim description of a party of four
Brits who were attacked for being unaware of procedure when
encountering the Shoguns entourage. One was violently
killed, the others escaped. The British government retaliated
and a battle ensued.
From
there Samurai Sketches goes into the long samurai history,
each chapter preceded with a page of settings and players
to fully set the scene.
The
comprehensive book has many photographs of decked-out samurai,
a glossary of Japanese terms and family crests. If you enjoy
Japanese history, Samurai Sketches wont disappoint.
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