![]() In addition to penning a good book to curl up with, Clavell built a bridge of understanding from West to East by fictionalizing a historical encounter between them. Clavell's survival of a Japanese death camp gave him unique insight into human behavior and cultural differences, enabling him to produce a truly gripping story. Such features make Clavell an oldfashioned storyteller who spins captivating yarns rather than an artiste like Virginia Woolf or Thomas Pynchon. The novel contains war, trade disputes, cultural clash, passion, death, and descriptions of beauty that have kept readers up until dawn. Although not considered great literature by most critics, ShÅgun: A Novel of Japan made its author, James du Maresq Clavell, one of the most widely read twentieth-century novelists.
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