KyoshiClayton wrote:My title was The Shuri Crucible, which was everything a book title should not be.
Yeah, I'm not sure if I'd have been as excited with that title. The Shotokan's Secret had enough gumption to do the trick.
The first edition of Shotokan's Secret turns out to be the first half of the story. As you can see from the bunkai forums here, I have finished the second half of the story. I know what the Heians were about. More importantly, I know why they suppressed the applications. Once you see the overall syllabus, it is very plain.
It almost sounds like you're trying to convert me ...
I faced very much the same journey in 2002-2004, then finding myself putting a lot of my thoughts into a manuscript. I took a good year to finish that, but when I was done, I found out that what I produced was only the overview. It has taken me since then to flesh out my own syllabus. It's been painstaking - I had to draw a lot of figures sequencing out drills and applications.
Back to the book ...
I'd typically skip the Introduction of most martial arts books (in fact I had already skipped the Acknowledgements, About the Author, and the San Ten Sensei sections). I had a student once purchase a book on kicking by some famous Korean master, only to find to his dismay that the first 30 odd pages were filled with personal pictures of the guy with celebrities/dignitaries and performing kicks shirtless!
Shotokan's Secret however had an introduction written like one of the problem statements I faced whilst doing my Masters of Business coursework. Surely this wasn't some karate instructor trying to take on more than he can chew? That's refreshing. Someone who was ready to think independently and creatively about martial arts. Grudgingly, I admit the author is onto something and I scan the 'Author' and 'San Ten Sensei' section again before jumping into the book.