Tomoe Gozen (novel) explained

Tomoe Gozen
Author:Jessica Amanda Salmonson
Illustrator:Wendy Adrian Shultz
Country:United States
Language:English
Series:Tomoe Gozen Trilogy
Genre:Fantasy, Historical
Release Date:1981
Media Type:Print Paperback)
Isbn:0-441-81653-3
Oclc:320788272
Followed By:The Golden Naginata

Tomoe Gozen is a novel by Jessica Amanda Salmonson, published in 1981. Set in an alternate universe resembling feudal Japan, the book combines the tale of historical female samurai Tomoe Gozen with the legends and creatures of Japanese mythology to create an action-adventure fantasy. It is the first part of the Tomoe Gozen Trilogy which met with some success in the 1980s fantasy novel market. The series is notable for its unusual, highly researched samurai background and feminist story slant.

A revised version of the novel re-titled The Disfavored Hero was published in 1999.

Plot summary

Tomoe Gozen, a warrior of incredible skill, is the vassal of warlord Shojiro Shigeno. In the process of defeating Shigeno's enemy, the Chinese monk Huan, Tomoe is nearly killed. Huan resurrects her on the condition that she turn against her former master, and after committing a series of evil deeds under Huan's power, Tomoe manages to free herself and becomes ronin, or masterless samurai. The story mostly traces Tomoe's attempts to regain her honour, leading her into conflict with enemies, friends and the samurai culture that created her.

Characters

Sequels

Tomoe Gozen had two sequels, both also published by Ace Books.

See also

External links