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Returning home to investigate the possible connection of his family's tea shop with smugglers, Seikei, now a samauri in eighteenth-century Japan, becomes involved in murder at a local puppet theater and saving the life of his sister's accused boyfriend.Tags
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This book is a little treasure. Short (just under 200 undersized pages) and packed with humor and action, this book takes little time to enjoy. Seikei was adopted from his family by a judge and trained to be a samurai. He is not as good a samurai as he could be but his heart is in the right place and he is not totally witless. He is sent to his hometown to investigate smuggling but gets involved in two murders in a puppet theater house. The reader is treated with insight in this centuries old art form as he tries to discover the murderer, help his sister's boyfriend, and learn about the smuggling operation run by a gang of pirates.
Good fun!
Good fun!
This is the fifth book in the Samurai Mysteries series by the Hooblers. There are six books total in this series. This was another good book in this series although I didn't like it quite as much as the previous book "The Sword that Cut the Burning Grass".
In this book Seikei ventures back to his home town of Osaka. The Judge sends him on a mission to find a good place to eat Fugi (poisonous puffer fish). Seikei stops by home and finds his brother in charge of the family business. They go to a puppet show and one of the cast members is murdered. Seikei takes it upon himself to solves this horrible crime, hoping that he can figure out who the killer is before the facts to Judge Ooka. Inadvertently Seikei finds that the puppet theater show more murders may be part of an even bigger smuggling scheme.
It was great to get some more history about Seikei's family and meet his sister and brother. Each of these books has focused on some aspect of Japanese history and this book focused on Japanese puppet theaters. There was a lot to learn about how Japanese puppet theaters were run. There was also some focus on trading and importation laws.
There wasn't as much action and adventure in this book as in previous ones. It all takes place in Seikei's home town. It was novel that Seikei felt confidant enough to take this case on himself without the Judge's guidance, so from that aspect Seikei grows some as a character. While the mystery was interesting it wasn't as desperate or engaging as the last couple books have been.
Overall an okay read. Learning about Japanese puppet theater was interesting. Seikei grows some as a character and takes the initiative on this investigation. But there is a lot less action and adventure and parts of the book were kind of slow. show less
In this book Seikei ventures back to his home town of Osaka. The Judge sends him on a mission to find a good place to eat Fugi (poisonous puffer fish). Seikei stops by home and finds his brother in charge of the family business. They go to a puppet show and one of the cast members is murdered. Seikei takes it upon himself to solves this horrible crime, hoping that he can figure out who the killer is before the facts to Judge Ooka. Inadvertently Seikei finds that the puppet theater show more murders may be part of an even bigger smuggling scheme.
It was great to get some more history about Seikei's family and meet his sister and brother. Each of these books has focused on some aspect of Japanese history and this book focused on Japanese puppet theaters. There was a lot to learn about how Japanese puppet theaters were run. There was also some focus on trading and importation laws.
There wasn't as much action and adventure in this book as in previous ones. It all takes place in Seikei's home town. It was novel that Seikei felt confidant enough to take this case on himself without the Judge's guidance, so from that aspect Seikei grows some as a character. While the mystery was interesting it wasn't as desperate or engaging as the last couple books have been.
Overall an okay read. Learning about Japanese puppet theater was interesting. Seikei grows some as a character and takes the initiative on this investigation. But there is a lot less action and adventure and parts of the book were kind of slow. show less
Returning home to investigate the possible connection of his family's tea shop with smugglers, Seikei, now a samauri in eighteenth-century Japan, becomes involved in murder at a local puppet theater and saving the life of his sister's accused boyfriend.
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99 Works 4,947 Members
Dorothy Hoobler is a historian and author of over sixty books, both fiction and nonfiction, mostly for young readers. Her and her husband are the authors of the well-loved American Family Album series, including The Japanese American Family Album, which was named a Carter G. Woodson Honor Book in 1997. The Hooblers won the Edgar Allan Poe Award show more for Best Young Adult Novel in 2005 with In Darkness, Death. In addition, the Society for School Librarians International chose their book Showa: The Era of Hirohito for a best book award in 1991, and they have been cited for excellence by the Library of Congress, the Parents' Choice Foundation, Bank Street College, the International Reading Association, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, and the New York Public Library. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
B. Wahlströms ungdomsböcker (3319)
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- A Samurai Never Fears Death
- Original title
- A Samurai Never Fears Death
- People/Characters
- Seikei; Judge Ooka
- Important places
- Tokyo, Japan
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 86
- Popularity
- 371,357
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.31)
- Languages
- English, Swedish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 2
























































