The book consists of Beginner and Elementary courses with parallel Japanese-English texts. The textbook gives you a lot of examples on how questions and answers in Japanese should be formed. It is easy to see the difference between Japanese and English using parallel translation. The method utilizes the natural human ability to remember words used in texts repeatedly and systematically. The texts are provided with the phonetic transcriptions Furigana and Romaji. With the translation on the same page, you can effortlessly learn what any unfamiliar words mean. You can quickly pick up new vocabulary and phrases that are used over and over in the book. As you read the book, your brain begins to remember words and phrases simply because you are exposed to them several times. You don't even realize, until you have to recall what you've learned, that you have already learned the new words and phrases. The audio tracks are available inclusive online. With the help of QR codes, call up an audio file without manually entering web addresses. This book has already helped a lot people to discover their true language potential. Twenty minutes a day is the rule for success!
Not kindle unlimited, but is available on that and other formats, and actually got it through LibraryThing writer for possible review with the name Vadim Zubakhin not Enni Saarinen attached to email but maybe co writers. As an FYI to writers who send out books this way, using google drive, please be advised that this no longer works for files sent to a yahoo account who evidently have gotten 'techy', even if the same email is used and linked with the associated/same username gmail account so it would be google. Also had this one by Valentino Armani, and possibly more by him or the others but working through a book at a time, so then went on to Lilie Hasek and now Miku Ono.
Again, i speak American English, understand British, German, French, Spanish, and various 'bad' words in a few other languages. This story is more conversational versus story, with vocabulary words and writing/figures or symbols, as well as the usual dictionary for both languages at the end. I don't think will retain much of this book well maybe if went back through it a couple of times, but it is a beautiful sounding and looking language.
watashitachi ni hon wo kashi tekurete arigatou {that is supposedly thank you for lending us the book, which is close as could find for thank you for giving me this book}
The actual title seems to be Learn Japanese Language Through Dialogue Bilingual for Speakers of English Beginner and Elementary (A1 A2)