An interesting book covering a topic area with precious few resources available in English.
Prior to reading this book I had a vague knowledge of the old pleasure quarters of Japan through reading various texts focusing on geisha social history.
The authors pull together information from a vast array of sources, much of it interesting and relevant, and certainly provided me with several facts and traditions I didn't know about previously.
I wish there had been more illustrations from relevant ukiyo-e woodblock prints to help illustrate what the Yoshiwara actually looked like, and to show the differences between the levels of prostitutes and their manner of dress.
I felt that while the book gave a good general overview, there was a lot of detail missing so it was difficult to imagine how things worked back then. More could have been written about what they wore and why, what was the reason for each part of the distinctive look of an oiran for instance? Instead this is glossed over with vague mentions of 'one popular oiran decided to do it this way so everyone copied'.
I wanted more detail on what the different hairstyles meant, what types of hair ornaments were used and why, what designs were used on kimono and why, what were the types of dances and songs they had to learn, how were the rooms decorated and to what extent was personal taste allowed, what was the difference between tayuu and oiran??
I also found the morality of the authors coming through far too strongly at times, bizarrely alternating between being far too lenient on those taking advantage of the girls in the Yoshiwara and seeming to miss this 'simpler' time, and at other times being very critical that this situation ever existed.
At the end of the day the pleasure quarters such as Yoshiwara were dependent on female children being sold into sexual slavery, this is objectively awful and a neutral unbiased standpoint from the authors would have thrown this into relief all the more, showing it for the crime against humanity and flagrant misogyny that it was.