The Last Samurai (Paperback)
***Books listed on this website are available as new books. For information about used, sale, and other in-store items please call or email us.***
Staff Reviews
A book about a cynical single mother who is overqualified for everything and her optimistic son, whom she accidentally makes into a prodigy in, well, everything. Funny, wily, fabulous. She shows him Seven Samurai so that he has a father figure (or eight). Of course, when he is a little older, he has to go on a quest to find his real father… -David
— DavidCalled “remarkable” (The Wall Street Journal) and “an ambitious, colossal debut novel” (Publishers Weekly), Helen DeWitt’s The Last Samurai is back in print at last
Helen DeWitt’s 2000 debut, The Last Samurai, was “destined to become a cult classic” (Miramax). The enterprising publisher sold the rights in twenty countries, so “Why not just, ‘destined to become a classic?’” (Garth Risk Hallberg) And why must cultists tell the uninitiated it has nothing to do with Tom Cruise?
Sibylla, an American-at-Oxford turned loose on London, finds herself trapped as a single mother after a misguided one-night stand. High-minded principles of child-rearing work disastrously well. J. S. Mill (taught Greek at three) and Yo Yo Ma (Bach at two) claimed the methods would work with any child; when these succeed with the boy Ludo, he causes havoc at school and is home again in a month. (Is he a prodigy, a genius? Readers looking over Ludo’s shoulder find themselves easily reading Greek and more.) Lacking male role models for a fatherless boy, Sibylla turns to endless replays of Kurosawa’s masterpiece Seven Samurai. But Ludo is obsessed with the one thing he wants and doesn’t know: his father’s name. At eleven, inspired by his own take on the classic film, he sets out on a secret quest for the father he never knew. He’ll be punched, sliced, and threatened with retribution. He may not live to see twelve. Or he may find a real samurai and save a mother who thinks boredom a fate worse than death.
that breaks through the mundanity of life, work, and love to achieve
greatness.
— Off the Shelf
A triumph—a genuinely new story, a genuinely new form.
— A. S. Byatt - The New Yorker
The Last Samurai is an original work of brilliance about, in part, the limits of brilliance.
— Time
The book has been a great source of motivation for me. I must outdo Ludo, because he is younger than I am but smarter than I am. My father says that this is ridiculous, as Ludo is a fictional character. But this is precisely my point: how can I let a character who isn’t even real outdo me?
— Daniel (age 14)