---
product_id: 13354735
title: "Shinsengumi: The Shogun's Last Samurai Corps"
brand: "romulus hillsborough"
price: "3083 som"
currency: KGS
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.kg/products/13354735-shinsengumi-the-shoguns-last-samurai-corps
store_origin: KG
region: Kyrgyzstan
---

# Shinsengumi: The Shogun's Last Samurai Corps

**Brand:** romulus hillsborough
**Price:** 3083 som
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

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- **What is this?** Shinsengumi: The Shogun's Last Samurai Corps by romulus hillsborough
- **How much does it cost?** 3083 som with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.kg](https://www.desertcart.kg/products/13354735-shinsengumi-the-shoguns-last-samurai-corps)

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## Description

Shinsengumi: The Shogun's Last Samurai Corps

## Images

![Shinsengumi: The Shogun's Last Samurai Corps - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81PQiFyAFzL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐ 







  
  
    A Dating Sim is More Historically Accurate Than This Book
  

*by J***Y on Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2020*

I own this book twice, once on Kindle and again as a paperback copy which I bought with the express purpose of creating a series of videos debating the book point for point. The second time I bought it, I bought it used because I refused to give this man any more money than he already made off of me - that's how much I hate this book.Honestly, it's difficult for me to fully express my hatred for it. The author's primary sources were written in the 1920s and earlier, one of them by a man who himself admitted he was a novelist and not a historian writing a sensationalized account of events ... And one that somehow manages to paint the Shinsengumi with a more human brush than this propaganda bias trash fire of a book. He, at least, admitted to their strong points in parts and respected that they fought for beliefs and were not simply empty caricatures pursuing power for power's sake.I may have bought this book to gain a more historical perspective on the Shinsengumi after being introduced to it through a dating simulation visual novel, but I would have been better served trusting the clearly romanticized versions of the Shinsengumi in that game as the gospel truth than trusting anything this man has written on them. This is little more than a posthumous attack on the character of Kondo Isami with all positive portrayals of him brushed underneath the rug neatly or twisted in a way that makes him look like an unintelligent ape compared to the writer's clear bias, Katsu Kaishu, who is mentioned in this book more than the Shinsengumi's Vice-Commander, Hijikata Toshizo.The game in question may not portray Kondo as competent at all points in time and certainly has softened the harsher aspects of his personality, but at least it gives him a semblance of personhood even as it shows him blinded to the suffering he is putting his friends through because he is caught up in the events unfolding around him. It also does not fully attribute assassinations to him that he may not have had a hand in and there is historical doubt around, such as the Uchiyama assassination that was supposedly in retaliation for the magistrate's attempts to prove the then Roshigumi's involvement in the Osaka Sumo Stable incident. It never treats its narrative as fact and instead as a creative interpretation of history, and it somehow manages to be more respectful of these very real men ...In spite of turning over half the cast into vampires, at certain points and in certain routes, and outright erasing the context behind Yamanami's historical death.How this man has managed to write this book and continues to brag about it being the only English language narrative of the Shinsengumi when it is too incoherently written to be called a narrative of anything other than his own meandering hatred of Kondo Isami is ... Frankly speaking, incredible. The fact that he specifically mentions in his description of this book that he stands by the obnoxiously overdone motifs of PROPENSITY TO KILL and WILL TO POWER and has pinned a review comparing the Shinsengumi to Hell's Angels speaks volumes of his arrogance -- Proving that perhaps he himself is the one with the true grain of self-importance here, and the true will to power in wanting to make others see and believe about these men as he does.If he had an ounce of the dignity of the men he claims to admire in Sakamoto and Kaishu, he would at least clearly acknowledge that Kondo Isami may have struggled with his own choices, evidenced by his journey to see Dr. Matsumoto during his trip to Edo to petition that Iemochi visit Kyoto to parley with the Loyalists. He would relegate Hijikata to more than a footnote in another man's narrative, and show him as an agent in his own destiny rather than a man simply trapped in the long shadow that Kondo Isami cast, chasing it onto his own death at Hakodate.These men were not wholly good men.They did things that would curl the toes of any modern person who has not taken the chance to toughen their stomach. The story of the Shinsengumi is painted in blood and tragedy, as bold and unyielding as the red of their banner. It's true that there are countless deaths in their wake, the result of their choices and the actions they took as a result - And even so, there is also that wavering spirit of the warrior that the author thoroughly fails to understand as he grasps only the philosophy of the Blade that Heals and does not embrace the spartan and necessary approach of Japan's greatest duelst, Miyamoto Musashi. Had he read extensively on the history he claims to understand, if he were really a historian trained to think critically instead of a journalist, maybe the author would understand that there is more than one way of viewing that warrior's way.The sincerity that the men of the Shinsengumi employed was one of the necessity of death and bloodshed that left a great toll on them, which is evident if you know how their story ends and how Kondo and Hijikata both felt before they died. But in that sincerity, there is also beauty, something to be honored in that will - not to power, but to persevere - no matter how much the world at large hated and feared them and blamed them for countless things. It takes more grace and strength to not defect from your beliefs when the entire world is against you than it does to hold a popular and progressive opinion.And that is all this author's work is.Decades of the revisionist history devoid of the nuance of the humanity of their opponents as portrayed by the victorious Choshu men in the Meiji government. If you want to learn the truth about the Shinsengumi, you're better off going through Japanese wikipedia and using a translation program to get your information.Whatever decision you come to, whether you see them as the same villains the author does or as the heroes the writers of the game I mentioned and the NHK drama "Shinsengumi!" clearly do, at least you will have come to the decision under your own power without the interference of a man who does not have the authority to make the claims he does. Especially when he asks for the blessing of the descendants and family of the very men he's written this hit piece on and uses images of their generous contributions in this work.Rest assured, this author will not be the only English language narrative of the Shinsengumi for long.Flawed as they are, as brutal as they could be, they deserve better than the distorted image that this book casts as their reflection.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Brings Alive the Story of the Shogun's Last Samurai Corps
  

*by J***D on Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2018*

I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in the Shinsengumi, Bakumatsu or early Meiji Restoration periods of Japanese history. It gave me a better understanding, despite the author’s at times heavy-handed style, about who the Shinsegumi were, what they did and their role in Japanese history in an easy to understand and readable manner. I appreciated the way hard information, stories and personalities were played out to give the subject matter human depth.Despite the author's tone, I found Shinsengumi less villainous and more men of their times, the Shogunate’s equal and opposite reaction to what we’d now call domestic terrorism. Shinsengumi were violent and merciless and their opponents were no better. The people they were created to defeat were plotting to overthrow the government, at times burn down Kyoto (which would kill lots of innocent people) and abduct the Emperor if need be to carry out their plans. (The Ikedaya incident alone in a good example of this) Ultimately, those revolutionaries and their better contemporaries such as Saigo Takamori did overcome and create a better Japan but their methods were not peaceful.Telling this story fleshes out turmoil in Kyoto and the ground-level fighting done to keep the peace as well as teaching about who the individuals in the Shinsengumi were and their varied backgrounds. What I found most interesting about Kondo Isami and Hijikata Toshizo is that they were self-made samurai who rose from the ranks of peasants, something that should have been impossible in Japan’s rigid caste system but in these chaotic times men like them were elevated based on ability and not birth.The book’s downside is the author’s self-indulgent writing style. He gives himself leeway in the beginning by claiming this isn’t really “non-fiction” because not all of his sources are foolproof, but by that logic no true non-fiction may exist. The book often has a negative tone toward its subject matter and comes off as opinionated when the narrative would better be served by telling the story and giving context to create positive or negative impressions instead of zeroing in on what’s dislikable about X, Y or Z or using colorful adjectives.And as others have said, the ‘propensity to kill’ repetition was pointless and annoying unless the goal was for it to serve as the inspiration for some sweet Shinsengumi-themed death metal song lyrics. (For context though, despite its being peppered throughout the book, the phrase is only obnoxious on one page of constant repetition so it’s not on every other page as our reviews may make it seem.)If it wasn’t for the style I would give this book five stars for being informative, highly readable and memorable.

### ⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Kind of scholarly, kind of gossipy
  

*by K***R on Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2013*

I'm not too sure how to describe this book.First, let me say that I did enjoy the story. For those only marginally acquainted with he subject, the Shinsengumi were supposed to be a pseudo-police force to protect the Shogun at the end of the Tokugawa shogunate. They failed, on many levels. the Shinsengumi have a special place in the hearts and history of the Japanese - the closest parallel I can think of is the Texas Rangers, and even then that is not a good comparison. The Shinsengumi have been portrayed in film and anime (most notably Rurouni Kenshin for anime and, well, Shinsengumi with Toshiro Mifune for film); it's through anime that I became interested in knowing more.The good parts: There is a lot of information here. This is the scholarly part. Mr. Hillsborough does a good job of telling the story of the Shinsengumi, explaining the historical setting and giving insight into the characters and their motivations. Footnotes and textual explanations while not copious are sufficient.The bad parts: somehow, even though we are talking only a period of some 6 years the story seems short, almost a sketch. Dry. Bring a bottle of water with you dry. And, one of the most dramatic moments of the Shinsengumi - one of the most dramatic moments in Japanese history, the incident at Ikeda'ya - is pretty unsatisfying. Accurately portrayed I have no doubt but somehow lacking.For a student of Japanese history and culture, this is a good book and does the job well and I do recommend it for this reader. For the casual reader in Japonica, maybe not so much.

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*Product available on Desertcart Kyrgyzstan*
*Store origin: KG*
*Last updated: 2026-05-26*