The Blade of the Courtesans explained

The Blade of the Courtesans
Translator:James M. Vardaman
Author:Keiichiro Ryu
Country:Japan
Language:Japanese
Publisher:Vertical Inc (US)
Pub Date:1986
English Pub Date:2008
Media Type:Print (Hardback)
Pages:304
Isbn:978-1-934287-01-9

The Blade of the Courtesans is a historical fiction novel by Japanese author Keiichiro Ryu originally published in 1986.[1] It was published in English by Vertical Inc in 2008. Ryu's debut novel, it was nominated for a Naoki Award and "instantly made him a doyen of historical fiction."[2]

Plot summary

"The grueling, century-long battle royal that plunged Japan into “an Era of the Warring States” has finally ended, and the victorious Tokugawa clan rules the freshly-united Land of the Rising Sun. The shogun will come from the Tokugawa line for more than two hundred years, right until Commodore Perry’s "black ships" force the far eastern archipelago into modernity. While the Mikado or emperor retains prestige, he is but a figurehead. It is the beginning of the Edo period.

Yet, despite the onset of peace and prosperity, trouble brews in Yoshiwara, the pleasure quarters of Edo where geisha courtesans count among their clientele numerous bored samurai who are no longer called upon to fight. The issuance of a gomenjo or permit for the red-light district is threatening to occasion a momentous power struggle. The courtesans themselves have no blade of their own—not until an unspoiled young swordsman from the mountains of Higo province arrives in Edo.

Raised by the late legendary Miyamoto Musashi and mysteriously sent to the capital by him, the innocent but lethal Matsunaga Seiichiro bears a secret that is hidden even from himself: he is of the imperial family. Having barely survived as ruthless purge by Tokugawa minions as an infant thanks to Musashi, the youth is now more than ready to stand his own against forces that stubbornly seek his death. But the infamous Yagyu clan that serves the shogun includes ninja as well as daylight warriors among its ranks."

Characters (in order of appearance)

Reception

“The violence is ultra-modern and the fights are the literary equivalent of a contemporary martial arts film and are played out with cinematic speed and balletic grace. The novel is full of well-researched information… It is told in a straightforward manner yet includes elements of magic, fantasy, romance, and chivalry. Vertical has yet again published a book that, without its commitment to contemporary Japanese literature, would never have been translated into English.”- The Japan Times

Notes and References

  1. http://www.vertical-inc.com/books/blade.html The Blade of the Courtesans By Keiichiro Ryu
  2. Ryu, Keiichiro. The Blade of the Courtesans, back cover.
  3. Ryu, Keiichiro. The Blade of the Courtesans, p.47.
  4. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, pp. 16, 35, 69.
  5. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 35.
  6. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 17.
  7. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 21.
  8. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 34.
  9. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 37.
  10. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 46.
  11. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 38.
  12. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 43.
  13. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 103.
  14. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, pp. 44, 46.
  15. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 68.
  16. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 172.
  17. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 178.
  18. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 214.
  19. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 216.
  20. Ryu, The Blade of the Courtesans, p. 275.