Y'all. I did it. I FINALLY FINISHED THE DOG SHOGUN.
THIS WAS A SLOG.
Here's the deal: this is a VERY academic work. Long stretches of it are EXTREMELY dry. The Dog Shogun reads a bit like an (unusually long) Ph.D. thesis--I checked to see if it was, but it's not--and there is a lot going on here. Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, the fifth shogun of the Tokugawa dynasty, has not been well-regarded historically, and Dr Bodart-Bailey is not only writing a biography of him: she is also rehabilitating his image. She interrogates the traditional sources, examining the motives of their author(s) as well as their reliability. She takes a close look at how Tsunayoshi's contemporaries, both commoners and those of high rank, looked at his policies and how their lives were affected. Based solely on this book, it appears few if any other scholars have done this before, and this effort is a major, noteworthy undertaking. I'm tremendously impressed--but I was also, for many chapters, bored out of my mind. I wouldn't say that this is Bodart-Bailey's fault, though: I bought this book expecting a more mass-market biography, and that's not at all what this book is. If I'd paid more attention--even read the blurb on the back--I would have known that.
Regarding the title: Tsunayoshi was nicknamed the "Dog Shogun" by chroniclers and critics because of his "Laws of Compassion," some of which protected dogs. It wasn't meant to be a flattering moniker, though it may look like one to us. He personally was probably Not That Into dogs. Do not read this expecting dogs. (I know. I KNOW.)
While I did get bored a lot--I put this book aside very often in the last THREE YEARS, good glob--I also learned a tremendous amount about Japanese history and government, shoguns, the 47 ronin, Confucianism, and how the best-intended laws can go awry. (I also learned a new word: "enfeoffed.") Some of the chapters do move more quickly and are great reads. For example: the section on the 47 ronin--arguably the most famous story from Japanese history--was alone worth the effort of reading the whole book (or at least all the preceding chapters, without which I would not have had the necessary context). They ARE still very academic in style, though.
There are two things that would have helped this book: one, a statement at the very beginning that THERE IS A GLOSSARY AT THE END, OH MY GLOB, I WAS FIGURING OUT WORDS LIKE "DAIMYO" FROM CONTEXT, and a family tree. The inclusion of a family tree for books involving dynastic succession seems obvious to me, but there isn't one here, and it drove me bonkers. I may draw one myself and put it in my copy of The Dog Shogun just so I have it. If you pick this book up, I recommend you keep a paper & pen nearby so you can draw one as you go along.
tl;dr Three stars: gets slow, gets boring, but I learned SO MUCH and some sections are cracking. No dogs.