Young Samurai Book 1
*Way of the Warrior*
To tell the truth, I was a bit hesitant to begin with the Young Samurai series in the beginning as I didn't have enough data about the series but mocking me it has secured a righteous and a deserving place in my ''memorable'' shelf. It's the first book in the Young Samurai series written by Chris Bradford, who himself is an expert in martial arts and the ''Japanese'' arts and language. The story revolves around a 12 year old Jack Fletcher, a young lively boy who works at a ship piloted by his father in order to discover the unknown lands in the big wide world. But things turn bad as his ship is raided by Dokugo Ryu, a rogue Japanese ninja and assassin and Jack gets stuck in the very orderly land of Japan and is trained as a samurai and makes new friends in order to gain redemption for his fathers murder. The introduction of the characters is done really well. The prologue was crafted remarkably, it gives you of the brief idea about the outline of the novel. Jack Fletcher is a unique and a very different hero, but a true an an original one. The thing that makes this novel stand out from many others is that it is set in the land of the rising sun, that is, in Japan. After, a few introductory chapters and murder of his father, Jack is transported to the shores of Japan and taken to a dojo, this marks the beginning of Jack learning to be civilized and groomed in Japanese culture. The book gives a lot of historical data as well as information and enlightens the reader about Japanese language, tradition and culture. Mark my words, a lot of importance is given to these things which makes it very interesting as you get to learn some real helpful things from a story book. There's a lot of Japanese words too, like Dojo, Katana, Ninja, Bushiden, Zen and a glossary of fifty more frequently being used. The pace of the story is steady, barring the huge time leaps Chris teleports us readers into. Mainly, the story is good, I'm not saying its 100% original but it's written in a very good way. I found that it exactly resembles the Harry Potter universe, just in a different culture, and without magic, but the fundamentals are just the same. Like Jack being Harry, Yamato being Ron (At the end), Akiko being Hermione, Kazuki being Draco, additionally, the book even has a samurai (there wizard) training university like Hogwarts (here Nin Ryu something.) Therefore, I say the book is not entirely original but don't get me wrong it does not fail, in the least way to entertain you. In the beginning you may feel, these Japanese names are harder than chemical reactions but trust you instincts and read on, you will get the idea of who's who as you continue to read a few more chapters and enjoy the blissful experience of getting enchanted by this beautiful Japanese world. The writer describes many places, natural environments in a very fine detail. It may bore some reader as the writer goes into unnecessary details. The characters, mainly Jack, Akiko, Yamato, Masamoto play the main role in the story along with some selective university students and their sensei (Japanese word for teacher). The story progresses and gets a lot better as our young samurais enter the academy and enter various classes martial arts, sword fighting, wrestling, philosophy, meditation, etc. The dialogues are used economically, but impressively. The book contains heavy weaponry and arsenal including swords, shurikens, star blades and frequent bloodshed at regular intervals. The battle scenes cover almost 30% of the book, mostly including training and friendly battles (not really...) and just grab your attention and make you want to read more. But it's not only about war, its also about human heart, love, a lot of philosophy and the true way of living life. The Zen Sensei throws around some very appreciable quotes which are very inspiring which makes it a good reason to gift this book to younger readers. It emphasizes on some moral values like courage, determination, bravery, selflessness, sacrifice. It is indeed a well balanced book. (Just add some creepy supernatural stuff and it would be just perfect.) The villains are classy and I'm sure some particular characters that will play an important role in the future installments. There's some bullying and beating up involved but it ends in a positive way and is forgotten soon. The characters' personality development is done well in just a period of one book. That reminds me, time flows very quickly and jumps months at a time. This book covers almost 10 months of Jack's life as he reaches from England to Japan and starts training at the latter. A perfect book with good vocabulary, stylish Japanese words, culture, brief history, original characters, immersive plotlines, awesome and really malevolent villains, love, friendship, bonds, sword fights, battles and want for power and honour. A well balanced book that took to to a different place and a different time. I look forward on pressing on the Young Samurai series and I definitely will. Nice Reading!
*Plot*