In Eisner-nominated Fumi Yoshinagas alternative history of Edo-era Japan, the men of Japan are dying out, and the women have taken up the reigns of power--including the shoguns seat In Edo period Japan, a strange new disease called the Redface Pox has begun to prey on the countrys men.
Within eighty years of the first outbreak, the male population has fallen by seventy-five percent.
Women have taken on all the roles traditionally granted to men, even that of the shogun.
The men, precious providers of life, are carefully protected.
And the most beautiful of the men are sent to serve in the shoguns Inner Chamber.
Curious about why female lords must take on male names, the shogun Yoshimune seeks out the ancient scribe Murase and his archives of the last eighty years of the Inner Chambers--called the Chronicle of the Dying Day.
In its pages Yoshimune discovers the coming of the Redface Pox, the death of the last male shogun, and the birth of the new Japan.
Carolyn Brinkley
100.39 Lei
Robert C. Seacord
348.78 Lei
Editors Of Chartwell Books
48.90 Lei
Peter J. Gentry
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Roni Capin Rivera-Ashford
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Deborah Marcero
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John C. Peckham
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Elizabeth Letts
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Andreas J. Köstenberger
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