An engrossing read (don’t mind the dates - I was reading it while on holiday in Japan, thus on some days I was too tired to read anything!), and the characters will draw you in and your sympathies for them. Knowing their eventual fates, I could not help but think at times that maybe some of them will eventually escape that inevitability.
I think that having some background knowledge of what happened would be useful but not necessary, as the preface and the story provide the necessary information. Prior to reading this though, I had read Jonathan Clement’s Christ’s Samurai, so I was able to better appreciate the events as they unfolded.
But a large part of the story - three-quarters of it actually is about the lives of made-up characters but who nonetheless are plausible in their worldviews and behaviour. Made-up by the author because there is almost nothing of record of those peasants who died at Hara Castle in that April of 1638. Their trials and tribulations, the hardships they endure at the hands of nature (crop failures, floods) and man (the Matsukuras - their feudal overlords exacting punishing taxes, which was one of the reasons that led to the revolt historically) are realistically portrayed, up to the point whereby things came together and rebellion is the result.
The rebellion and battles makes up the final quarter of the story. The battles themselves are not described in great detail, more along the lines of so and so did this and led to this. And I appreciate that because it would be out of place with the tenor of the narrative. Only in the final moments, at the climax, do we have some semblance of a battle scene but only because it involves some of the key characters - characters whom I have come to care and like. It was tragic, and heart-wrenching, their final moments, even though I knew that was what was going to happen.
I also was reading this while travelling around Amakusa. Being there while reading the story, knowing that some of the places I visited were where those events happened, added - a layer of realism to the story. Standing at the spot where Masuda Shiro was born, looking at Yushima where the rebellion was formulated, being at Futae where the rebels marched past while enroute to Tomioka Castle (which I had to give a miss because of rain and time) - it made the reading an even more personal experience.