
Shōgun: El Señor de la Guerra (Saga Asiática, #1)
4.41
213,469 valoraciones·8,744 reseñas
Tras perderse en el mar, el inglés John Blackthorne despierta en un lugar que pocos europeos conocen y aún menos han visto: Nippon. Arrojado a la hermética sociedad del Japón del siglo XVII, una tierra donde la línea entre la vida y la muerte es muy delgada, Blackthorne debe lidiar no solo con un pu...
- páginas
- 1152
- Format
- Paperback
- Publicado
- 1975-01-01
- Editorial
- Dell
Sobre el autor

James Clavell
160 libros · 0 seguidores
James Clavell, born Charles Edmund Dumaresq Clavell was a British novelist, screenwriter, director and World War II veteran and POW. Clavell is best known for his epic Asian Saga series of novels and their televised adaptations, along with such films asThe Great Escape, The FlyandTo Sir, with Love.---------------------...
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Calificación y Reseña
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Reseñas de la comunidad
8,744 reseñas4.4
213,469 valoraciones
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Matt's Fantasy Book Reviews·1 years ago
Watch my video review by clicking here.
4.5/5. An extremely unsatisfying ending still can't take away what is otherwise an incredible book and history lesson.
4.5/5. An extremely unsatisfying ending still can't take away what is otherwise an incredible book and history lesson.
Tim Null·3 years ago
Back in the 1970s (1973-1979), my wife and her friends and colleagues would pass around paperback books they read. It was cost-effective. When my wife received a book she didn't want to read, I'd read it. I read Shogun. I don't recall anything about it except that it was long, but I swear I read the whole damn book.**Addendum: 6 February 2023Someone commented somewhere that when he read the paperback version of Shogun, it was a two book series. This comment made me curious, so I did some Googlin...
Lyn·6 years ago
Back in 1980 there was a TV miniseries about this book starring Richard Chamberlain. I was a kid but recalled watching it and enjoying watching the samurai with their katanas and the alien culture described. Clavell’s book was first published in 1975 and this seemed to have sparked a resurgence of interest in Japanese culture, highlighted by John Belushi’s samurai character on Saturday Night Live.Anyway.James Clavell’s landmark masterpiece about English sailor John Blackthorne, called Anjin-san ...
Marquise·9 years ago
Update January 2024: There's going to be a new TV show based on this book next month!I didn't like the 1980 adaptation, so my hopes for this one out in February are that it'll be much better, as the trailer insinuates. I like the choice of actress for Mariko, she looks so much closer to my mental image of the character. Very promising!
Update March 2024:
Having now watched 5 episodes, halfway through the FX adaptation, I can say the following:- The show is "fixing" the book's most egregious i...
William·11 years ago
.This is The OneMy favourite book of all time. The one that transported me far away and long ago. The one that made our world cease to exist. The one that I read every spare minute of every day, even in elevators; a half page now and then. And when I was within 300 pages of the end, I stayed up all night and the morning to finish.I became Anjin-san in the magical world of feudal Japan.Ten years later in 1985 I read it again. Magic, power, intrigue, JAPAN. I'm about due now, to read it again.A c...
Melanie·12 years ago
To be honest - I couldn't finish this book. It's so atrocious, on so many levels, that I got exactly 75% of the way through and then gave up. The only reason I got so far was because this book was recommended to me by a friend, but nothing could possibly persuade me to continue reading this racist, sexist, extremely problematic monstrosity.Where to begin? This book is the standard white male fantasy. Glorious wonderful strong white male with a canonically-mentioned giant dick (so very crucial to...
Julio Genao·13 years ago
As a picture of Japanese history it suffers from what another reviewer hilariously called (I paraphrase, here) our "round-eyed western mythologized POV."Which, okay—it was written in the 70's, after all.But as a story? OMFG what a fucking story.I fell into this book as a teenager and didn't come back out until I'd read 600,000 words and had a conversational grasp of transliterated Japanese.Three days. Three days of bliss.I dare you to read this and not—at the earliest opportunity—call someone a ...
Sophie·13 years ago
Yes. I read 1,152 pages of a book I liked less and less as the pages went by. I could have given this 3 stars, maybe, but I was so unsatisfied with it all that I can't do it.It isn't even that it was unreadable - considering its size, it was a fast read, even though I had to use some special motivational tricks in the end when I just wanted to get it over with. The main problem was that there wasn't a single character I really liked, and god, I hate Blackthorne from the bottom of my very soul. I...
Manny·17 years ago
Japanese people tell me that it's all nonsense: samurai were not in fact ready to commit seppuku at the slightest provocation. They had a strong sense of honor, but were also interested in staying alive. Well, fancy that. Though I'm embarrassed to admit that I believed it when I read the book. I wish a Japanese author would return the compliment, and write a similarly bogus historical blockbuster about a Japanese hero visiting Europe during the late 16th century and helping Queen Elizabeth I sor...
Rob·18 years ago
So sorry, I am not worthy of the honor of reviewing this novel. If however, my Lord insists it, then I shall endeavor to offer up some humble thoughts regarding its mighty, even epic narrative. Neh? The scope is so vast, the characters and settings are so many, the head is liable to spin at times, so sorry. But the arc it follows is like a peregrine's path through the sky: long but fast and with vicious twists along what might otherwise have seemed a predictable path. I'm sure my Lord would agre...