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What Members Thought
My interest to date in samurai has been close to zero, my tolerance for violence and gore minimal (Game of Thrones had me running in the opposite direction), and being a pacifist I usually find books with endless descriptions of battles and war plans tedious. Yet all of this went out the window when I started Pamela S. Turner's
Samurai Rising
. Immediately I was besotted, eager to return to it when I was forced to put it down to do other things, fascinated by the topic, taken by the exciting
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I think I'm with Leonard on this one. His review is definitely worth a read.
I didn't finish this because it felt awfully breezy for the violent subject matter. Do I sound like I'm against nonfiction being fun? I'm really not. I like fun! But a light tone when talking about atrocity is more appropriate for adults who, presumably, get how serious it truly is, even when the violence took place hundreds of years ago. Booklist called this book "pure excitement" and I'm just SMH that senseless violen ...more
I didn't finish this because it felt awfully breezy for the violent subject matter. Do I sound like I'm against nonfiction being fun? I'm really not. I like fun! But a light tone when talking about atrocity is more appropriate for adults who, presumably, get how serious it truly is, even when the violence took place hundreds of years ago. Booklist called this book "pure excitement" and I'm just SMH that senseless violen ...more
Perfect to pair this gripping nonfiction account of real samurai with the fantasy historical novel Moribito: Guardian of the Spirit by Nahoko Uehashi featuring a female samurai. Loved the backup material in Turner's book -- maps, glossary, pronunciation guides, timelines, extensive endnotes, etc. On her website, the author also has a PDF discussion guide to download.
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Jun 01, 2015
Alison
rated it
it was amazing
Shelves:
best-of-year,
middle-school,
kid-friendly,
biography,
high-school,
illustrated,
non-fiction,
diverse-books,
world-history,
war
Gripping non-fiction that rips along at a terrific pace. It offers fascinating insights into ancient Japanese culture and practices, and it's chock full o' battle strategy, making it a great fit for fans of John Flanagan's novels (the Ranger's Apprentice and Brotherband Chronicles series). The copious notes at the conclusion of the book are both fascinating AND illuminating - kids (and adults) will be wowed by the amount of research that went into this book.
Full disclosure: my husband illustrate ...more
Full disclosure: my husband illustrate ...more
couldn't get into it. gave up at 20%. not worth wading through for me.
...more
Feb 23, 2016
Kathy
marked it as to-read
Mar 03, 2016
Dan
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J.j.
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Mar 25, 2016
Arwen Ungar
is currently reading it
May 11, 2016
MaryAnne
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May 26, 2016
Rachel
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May 31, 2016
sharon
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Jul 15, 2016
Amanda
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Oct 17, 2016
April Moody
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Nov 08, 2016
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