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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Good Reference Tool, April 20, 2000
By 
C. Pellitteri (Upland, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Best Karate, Vol.9: Bassai Sho, Kanku, Sho, Chinte (Paperback)
The entire BEST KARATE series is very educational once you struggle through how to learn the forms from the descriptions and pictures. The book does an excellent job, but learning and teaching forms from a book is inherently difficult. These forms come from a reliable source and are considered one of the authortative sources for these shotokan kata. Also includes great information (in the glossary) on japanese martial arts vocabulary. I enjoyed this entire series and found it overall very educational.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply the Best, April 12, 2010
This review is from: Best Karate, Vol.9: Bassai Sho, Kanku, Sho, Chinte (Paperback)
The Best Karate Series are the definitive books for learning the art of Shotokan karate. They have been around for many years and still none have surpassed their excellence. They are very helpful for the beginner and the advanced student alike. I have read them all and have found that each book in the series is excellent. Although you can't learn a martial art from a book alone, these books are an excellent supplement to your training and are very helpful in learning the finer points of the art of Shotokan. Each book in this series sets the standard for books on Shotokan training. There are simply none better, at least none better that I have found, and I read a lot of martial arts books. I highly recommend these books for anyone who is interested in improving their karate or who is interested in Shotokan. They are simply the best! Highly recommended. 5 Stars.

Bohdi Sanders, Shotokan Blackbelt and author of Warrior Wisdom: The Warrior's Path
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This series is the standard, December 18, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Best Karate, Vol.9: Bassai Sho, Kanku, Sho, Chinte (Paperback)
I've been studying Karate (Shotokan) in southern Japan for three years with a 7-dan teacher who is also an international referee. We use this series, combined with separate video tapes, as the standard by which to learn kata. occaisionally our own kata differs from the book in small detail, but the books still provide the basis for study. (Our copies are in Japanese but otherwise identical to the English versions)
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5.0 out of 5 stars Best Karate is no misnomer!, March 13, 2011
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This review is from: Best Karate, Vol.9: Bassai Sho, Kanku, Sho, Chinte (Paperback)
I cannot sing enough praises to this series of books. Together with the title Dynamic Karate, they form a foundation upon which to advance your karate with rock solid kihon information.

I started to practice karate at the age of 16. After a long period of medical school and residency training during which practicing karate was out of the question, I got back to it at the age of 38. In my comeback I found out that the spirit of karate had changed. When I started, the emphasis was on learning good kihon and good kata, so that your kumite skills would have a strong foundation. It was also on the moral values of karate. Now, I feel that much of that is being lost and kumite and competition is all many karateka think of.

This series of books presents karate in the light of an era of change. Sensei Nakayama lived in a generation marked by the transition of the karate as taught by Funakoshi, who believed it was unsuitable for competition, to an era where competition, if not the single purpose, has become one of the main goals of karate practitioners.

When you read Funakoshi's books, it is easy to grasp how he viewed karate: a martial art meant to discipline ones body, improve ones health and lifespan, rein in ones violent impulses, and promote the sense of respect and politeness towards others, especially ones would be opponents. In summary, karate was to span a persons whole being and attitude, both inside the dojo as well as outside. Maybe especially outside.

Sensei Nakayama clearly inherited that way of thinking and added to it a scientific view of body mechanics and systematic organization of techniques and concepts. He also presents excerpts of famous tactical experts of the past, many of whom where not karateka, but swordsman or strategists as they were called. Those excerpts represent the concept that all martial arts are the same in terms of rational, only the methods and weapons vary. The need for strategy, for constant training and for the understanding of the spirit is of paramount importance.

While learning Karate-do from a book is impossible, complementing what we learn at our dojo with technical information provided by this series of books is certainly very desirable. I dare say it is desirable regardless of your karate style. I hail from Kenyu-Ryu karate, which tends to use karate stances that are higher. But still, I feel that 100% of the books still apply.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent guide to learning Shotokan Katas., January 18, 2010
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This review is from: Best Karate, Vol.9: Bassai Sho, Kanku, Sho, Chinte (Paperback)
The "Best Karate" series by the late Nakayama is an important contribution to the art of Shotokan Karate. This volume (9), covers the proper sequence of Shotokan Karate Kata Bassai Sho, Kanku Sho, and Chinte. The katas taught in this great book are middle black belt level kata and should not be practiced until one has learned Hein 1,2,3,4,5, Tekki Shodan, Nidan, Sandan, Bassai Dai, Kanku Dai and Jion. The beauty of this book is how it examines in great detail how to properly perform these katas.

In conclusion, this book is fantastic when used in conjunction with actual training under a high ranking Shotokan Black Belt instructor.

Rating: 5 Stars. Joseph J. Truncale (Author: Shotokan Karate Self-Defense Techniques: Combat Karate for the street).
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Best Karate, Vol.9: Bassai Sho,  Kanku, Sho, Chinte
Best Karate, Vol.9: Bassai Sho, Kanku, Sho, Chinte by Masatoshi Nakayama (Paperback - January 15, 1986)
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