Richardson, from Dark Horse comics tells the story, in words, a labor of love after more than 30 years since he had initially heard the story; Stan Sakai, who is known for his Dark Horse samurai rabbit series, Usagi Yojimbo, draws the story, and classic historical manga storyteller Kazuo Koike (Lone Wolf and Cub, with Goseki Kojima) consulted on the story. This is one of an endless number of versions of a classic historical Japanese story focusing on the code of Bushido.
“To know this story is to know Japan," is the epigraph, an old Japanese saying about this piece of history, though in one of the several essays that follows the story we learn from Sakai that the version we see lovingly, faithfully created is just one version and probably is a little too neatly dividing up the good guys and bad guys. Too neat, maybe. The actual events happened in the eighteenth century, feudal times, where a nobleman named Kira insults another nobleman named Asano. During the quarrel in the palace of the Shogun Asano draws his sword on Kira, a crime punishable by death. Asano commits seppuku, his family stripped of its possessions and his samurai were cast adrift as ronin. Then the real story develops, one of loyalty, self sacrifice, vengeance. The Bushido code.
The book is well written, well paced, pretty simply and straightforwardly and lovingly told, with reverence that a westerner like Richardson feels he owes to a Japanese tradition. It's an interesting tale, but is maybe a little too reverential, especially give what Sakai reveals. I'd like to read a bit edgier version, and they exist, I know, but what this has to offer is gorgeous artwork from Sakai, informed by meticulous research in to history and art of the time. Included in the book are some of the work of Ogata Gekko, whose prints formed inspiration for this story. It's really beautifully done.