The Swordless Samurai
By (Author) Tim Clark
Griffin Publishing
Saint Martin's Griffin,U.S.
10th July 2008
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Asian history
952.023092
Paperback
272
Width 127mm, Height 191mm
Japan, during most of its history, has been ruled by its all-powerful Emperors. But in the 16th century - called by the Japanese the Age of Warring Clans - regional potentates called Shoguns were endlessly fighting one another with their small armies of samurai warriors. Hideyoshi, who called himself the Swordless Samurai, is the Japanese Horatio Alger.He worked his way up the ladder of strong class boundaries despite having none of the advantages. He was of peasant origin, but by bonding to powerful Lord Nobunaga, and being useful to him day and night, Hideyoshi secured a powerful patron. Much later, Hideyoshi broke all class barriers and ultimately became the most powerful man in Japan. This book tells how he did it. Hideyoshi was immortalised by a biographer - Kitami Masao - so much so that every schoolboy in Japan is taught the moral that good judgment, keen intelligence, and sharp wits will win out over your adversaries almost every time.Hideyoshi's leadership and success precepts, more than 50 of them, are embedded in the narrative as Hideyoshi wins many military victories and analyses his rise to supreme leadership. His unerring sense of what it took - drive, shrewdness, anticipation, and determination - is readily understandable to a Western businessman or businesswoman today.
"* "The wisdom of this 16th-century samurai is astonishingly prescient and pertinent for 21st-century leaders. Practical wisdom at its best." Warren Bennis, distinguished professor of Business. USC and author of Becoming a Leader"
Tim Clark lived in Japan for years. He now lives in Portland, Oregon.