This was a great little book absolutely packed with information. Written throughout with the enjoyable, ever so dry humor of Lonely planet writer John Ashburne, and garnished with interesting, strange & fun anecdotes by other Japanese petit luminaries, it can be read, & probably should be, in a number of different ways. As a front to back read, there is way too much information to err, digest, so you need to simply let go & enjoy the spirit of culinary adventure in which this was written. But don't even think about retaining much of the Japanese named foods, ingredients, cooking styles, locales, customs, seasonal variations, recipes, etc. unless you are already familiar with the food vocabulary. But this is where the book serves as a wonderful reference, which can be sliced and diced by regions, cooking styles, ingredients, celebrations & most of the above. It is very easy (and enjoyable) to focus on a specific aspect of Japans vast food culture by the books well arranged chapters. If you are wanting to learn some of the language, there is quite enough in here to help you get by & even a chapter committed to practical useful phrases, so this little book, small enough to carry around can be used as a culinary phrasebook as well. Lastly, the book is sprinkled with a small number of easy to follow, simple but classic recipes, so there you have it, a lot in a little book. The photos are pretty good but not inspirational, more just to give you a feel for what is being written about, but while this book is many, a photographic book it is not.
As mentioned, Asburnes writing style is very enjoyable. His knowledge and personal passion of Japans cuisine, its food culture & Japan itself shines through his words and his personal anecdotes. He treads a fine wire sometimes between warning the reader of some things which may be far removed from the common experiences of a western palate, (fermented rotting soy bean and fish sperm serve as two immediate examples) and treating such things as anomalies or weirdness or in any way disrespectful. He balances this with clarity of one comes from one side but loves the other.
In spite of this book being an 'informational' book, it is never a boring read. Glad I read it.