Full description not available
E**R
A fantastic book - 100% recommend
Such an important book for me as a young man and no less exciting and inspirational rereading it in middle age.
B**G
An inspiration
No other book touches my soul quite like this. Someone who has never pursued the way of the warrior and the way of spirit would not understand. It also captures the ancient spirit of Japan in the best way imaginable. Anime, manga and contemporary japanese subculture typically makes me cringe. THIS is the REAL Japan which has existed since the dawn of time and which will remain until the end. Tennō Heika Banzai! 🇯🇵
A**E
Awesome read for any young man.
I’m a huge fan of all things Miyamoto Musashi. So when first heard about the Vagabond Manga I was pumped. But then I found out it isn’t finished and there was a real possibility it never would be I didn’t want to get into it. Then I heard it was based off this book so I decided to read it instead. Best decision ever. The novelized story of my hero’s life is an inspiration for any young man trying to find his way in the world. Honestly I wish this book was better known because I feel like it could help a lot of lost men today.
C**Y
An Beautiful Journey
This book is hard to rate. It is long and sometimes inconsistent in its character arcs and subplots, which left me feeling a bit disconnected at times. Over the course of its dense 970 pages, it seemed to go in a thousand directions—sometimes rapidly, sometimes at a snail’s pace. All that said, this book felt less about the story, the battles, or even the conclusion. Instead, it offered a deep dive into the life, mind, and way of a samurai in feudal Japan.Packed with history, culture, philosophy, and personality, the book takes you on a non-linear adventure through the imagined life of Musashi and the many characters involved in his story. Honestly, it’s probably the best three-star book I’ve ever read, and I would still recommend it to anyone interested in feudal Japan, so I’m giving it a 4 out of 5.
M**X
Brilliant
True masterpiece, unique in its kind, and superbly written. This is one of the few books which I've read in a long time that I didn't want the story to end. Despite seeming a dauntingly long and hefty novel, the story flows at a neckbreaking pace, full of surprises and clever plots at every turn. The book I would most compare it to is James Clavell's epic "Shogun", but besides the fact that both stories take place more or less in the same time period in Japan (beginning of Edo period), the comparison ends there. Whereas "Shogun" describes Japan from the eyes of a foreigner, and deals with high-court intrigues, Musashi's fictional story (albeit loosely based on events in his life including all his ill-fated duels) deals with the common day-to-day life in Japan, the peasantry, the samurai, the secret lives of Geishas and pleasure quarters, Buddhist priests and itinerant monks, of families torn by the everlasting conflicts that was raging between North and South daimyo factions at that time (Osaka vs Edo courts), the tribulations of ronin who were left masterless after the battle of Sekigahara and who were roaming the country incessantly in search of odd jobs or who would become evil doers. Such a man was Musashi, who being on the losing side of the Sekigahara battle, started a life long wandering journey throughout Japan, perfecting his sword techniques and becoming, slowly, the most prestigious swordsman of all time. Although the book only recounts 12 years of this journey, these were without doubt his formative years, and the characters he meets, loves or fights with along the way all edge him, little by little, towards achieving his goal, the Way of the Sword. Every encounter Musashi goes through is a lesson of life and death, something that even we, as readers, can apply in our daily lives centuries later. It's timeless advice.The second thing I thoroughly enjoyed about the book was the translation. The way the story flows, the vocabulary used as well as the dialogues are very well rendered to the point where I was actually believing the text to be written originally in English. There's also quite a lot of light-hearted, downright comical dialogues, which give the story a lighter tone despite the somber aspect and seriousness of the background story. I actually wonder if this is the work of the translator (by the mere fact that eastern languages are not always easy to transpose into western ones) or if Eiji Yoshikawa himself inserted those funny passages. In any case, this novel was a hidden gem that I would highly recommend to anyone looking for brilliant historical fiction or simply who wants to learn more about Japanese culture during the Edo period.
C**S
Honor
Musashi is the essence of honor, the true path of the Samurai. After reading it now I fully understand why Manga is how it is. This book is a gem
S**Y
The Quintessential Samurai Book
Many of what are now tropes are introduced in this book: combatants with delayed reactions to fatal wounds, blood spurting, a nigh-unbeatable and ever-optimistic protagonist, a comic-relief old lady with a sharp sword and sharper tongue, a sad-sack friend who can't get it together, an antagonist who's keeps leveling up his own skills, and more! It's all told in a serialized format that sometimes features the titular Musashi and sometimes focuses on some interesting side character that you first met a half-dozen chapters ago.Ultimately, I recommend this for anyone who likes Samurai movies, manga, or anime.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 month ago