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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars With only one flaw, this book is nearly perfect
This is by far the best book I have found for systematically studying (learning) Kanji. Let me state my brief credentials so that you can have some confidence in my review. I graduated from university with a major in Japanese and Spanish for Education, K-12 (in the US). I taught Japanese in public schools, elementary, junior high and high school, as well as tutored...
Published on October 1, 2007 by ArcticFox

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I don't agree with this...
Really, I cannot understand all the five stars positive critics of this book.
The main problem, is that the system of teaching in this book is ABSOLUTELY DIFFERENT to
the BASIC KANJI VOL1 and BASIC KANJI VOL2. I think those begginer's books are great,
and I learnt the first 500 kanjis using them. If you suppose INTERMEDIATE KANJI BOOK
is the...
Published on October 25, 2009 by David Guaita


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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars With only one flaw, this book is nearly perfect, October 1, 2007
By 
ArcticFox (Never Never Land) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Intermediate Kanji Book (Kanji 1000 Plus) (Paperback)
This is by far the best book I have found for systematically studying (learning) Kanji. Let me state my brief credentials so that you can have some confidence in my review. I graduated from university with a major in Japanese and Spanish for Education, K-12 (in the US). I taught Japanese in public schools, elementary, junior high and high school, as well as tutored college students. I studied abroad at a school that focused primarily on teaching Japanese (all in Japanese), and I am currently living and working in Japan. Japanese is my personal hobby, and I spend approximately 20 hours a week studying, reading, and writing Japanese (specifically for increasing my knowledge of the language).

That said, I have found no Kanji book designed to teach Kanji that I can recommend apart from this series. The one critical flaw is that it uses some translation (English), which I feel is unnecessary and best excluded (so as to market this book to people of all mother tongues, and to avoid "poluting" a learner's brain with English as they study Japanese). Aside from that, it has an excellent approach.

Most Kanji books begin with showing you the character, the various readings, some example compound sentences (and maybe some example sentences), translation in English, and how to write the character. Then, of course, you begin filling in 10-20 little boxes with the character until your hand cramps up, all to end up completely forgetting how to write it the next day (and maybe even forget the reading, too).

This book is different. It takes you through the Kanji in a wholistic fashion, with no fill-in-the-boxes. Well, at least not the traditional kind. Instead, you look at Kanji as a set of characters composed of other characters, and see how they interrelate. You compare pronunciations of similar looking Kanji, of those with the same radical (root character), and those with opposite meanings, etc. You look at the various Kanji with the same reading but different meaning, and you compare groups to see what they have in common (commonality, such as the shape, meaning, use, and pronunciation). You will also look at characters attached to other combinations that are used as suffixes and prefixes, such as characters that negate meaning (turning "convenient" into "inconvenient").

By using this book, you can very efficiently and truly learn Kanji. You will be able to tell the difference between very similar Kanji, find it easier to write them by breaking them down into parts, and easily recall and use Kanji with opposite or similar meanings as well as apply suffixes and prefixes to make your language use more particular.

Some may notice the lack of apparent "emphasis" on writing the Kanji. It may appear so because it does not contain lots of boxes to write your Kanji in, and it never tells you to "write this Kanji 20 times." In fact, for many of the characters it will not show you ALL of the step by step strokes. Why? Because it places the radical/base character in one box. Why keep re-learning the stroke order for a character you should already know? In fact, if you learn each Kanji you come across as merely a series of strokes, you will feel constant frustration at your inability to remember how to write them. After all, who can remember 5-18 strokes for most of the 2000 characters? Multiply that and average it out, and see how unreasonable a task that is. Instead, you learn the radicals and then simply use them. For example, a character like the one used in the days of the week (I can't use Japanese font in Amazon, sorry, but the romaji is "YOO" or "YOU" with a long "O" sound), is extremely hard to remember. It has 18 strokes and doesn't look like anything but a complicated character. however, it's actually quite easy. On the left is the character for day ("HI"), then across from that at the top are two Katakana "YO" characters side by side, and then the last character is a standard character that, although it looks complicated, it's easy to learn and replicate. Remembering this character in this manner makes writing it from memory easy.

The infamous and highly controversial "Heisig Method" uses basically this same principle, except that you attach random (unrelated) English words to each character (or radical/base character). This allows you to memorize them easily, but the English word you attach to them is absolute nonsense and may confuse and harm your ability to learn the meanings of the Kanji later (yeah, you learn the meanings in the second book of Heisig's methodology; first book is nothing but the shapes of the characters). Using the Intermediate Kanji Book series (or the Basic Kanji Book series), you can do the same thing without the messy, nonsense English attached.

Get this book, study it, periodically review all of them, and then be proud of your Kanji ability. Yeah, go read those manga, novels, and magazines you bought but left lying around on the shelf because looking up the Kanji was too hard -- now you don't have to look too much up anymore!
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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Passed the JLPT 3... preparing for the JLPT 2?, February 5, 2002
By 
Brian Denslow (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Intermediate Kanji Book (Kanji 1000 Plus) (Paperback)
This is the third book of a series written by Ms. Kano. Be aware that the presentation of material is done in a much more "global" manner than the previous two. The preface sites that the book teaches an additional 240 kanji, (bringing the total number of characters taught in the series at this point to 740) and ever closer to the 1006 kanji that constitute "literacy" as an elementary school student (and sufficent to pass level 2 JLPT exam that tests 1000 kanji).

The alternative presentation style is suited for teaching the etymology of these more difficult characters and reinforcing the last 500 you would've learned up to this point in the series. Attention is paid to using the same character in as many possible cominations as practical.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Actually learning, instead of memorizing, January 15, 2008
This review is from: Intermediate Kanji Book (Kanji 1000 Plus) (Paperback)
This series of books is by far the best I have ever found for learning kanji. The first two Basic Kanji Book, Vol. 1 and Basic Kanji Book - Volume 2, set the stage, giving you a solid foundation of kanji from which you can move onto more complicated and more natural written patterns. They both involve plenty of repetition and reinforcement, ensuring that you are actually learning the kanji rather than just memorizing stroke patterns which you will soon forget.

This volume, "Intermediate Kanji Book 1", takes an innovative approach, going deep into kanji usage, supplying linkages and methods that allow you to see the various aspects of individual kanji, like building blocks, which enforces retention. There is a lot of grouping of the individual characters, forcing you to see the patterns and connections. The activities are by no means easy, and there is a lot more expected of the learner than just "fill in this little box" or "write this kanji 20 times". Because of this, the kanji you learn will stay learned, and you will find that learning new kanji becomes much easier due to the ability to see the groupings.

The only drawback of this book is that it isn't a very good study guide for the JLPT or for any of the various Japanese proficiency exams. The kanji are learned in logical order, which isn't the same as what is called for by the tests. However, if you want a general mastery of the language, rather than a certificate, you will be hard pressed to find a better study aid.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I don't agree with this..., October 25, 2009
This review is from: Intermediate Kanji Book (Kanji 1000 Plus) (Paperback)
Really, I cannot understand all the five stars positive critics of this book.
The main problem, is that the system of teaching in this book is ABSOLUTELY DIFFERENT to
the BASIC KANJI VOL1 and BASIC KANJI VOL2. I think those begginer's books are great,
and I learnt the first 500 kanjis using them. If you suppose INTERMEDIATE KANJI BOOK
is the logical progression, and you are going to follow learning kanjis from the 500 to the 1000, you are wrong.
The teaching method is completely different, and I found it really chaotic, hard and not very well designed for the learning process. Instead of learning 10 kanjis, and then making repetition exercises with them, like using them in sentences, writing the hiragana sounds, writing the kanji shape, etc., after learning 20 new kanjis you have to do exercises that are not specially related to those kanjis. I think is painful to learn the kanjis that way and you are constantly forgetting the new ones.
So, please, make a logical series of teaching books, and keep the same method of learning from the beggining to the end!
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very nice textbook, if a bit dense, August 5, 2009
By 
Sean Comerford (Brooklyn, NY, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Intermediate Kanji Book (Kanji 1000 Plus) (Paperback)
This definitely fits the bill as far as "intermediate" goes. All of the instruction is in Japanese, so if you are a beginner, don't pick this up. I bought this to use in my "Kanji III" class at the Japan Society in NYC, which is the most advanced kanji-specific class that is offered. The chapters that we have concentrated on in class were organized pretty nicely, and definitely gave me a better grasp on things like onyomi and kunyomi as well as verbs created from kanji compounds. Unfortunately the class that I am taking meets only once a week, and I've been pretty busy, so I haven't gotten as much out of this book as I would have liked to date - however, the setup of the book seems like it's pretty decently organized for self-study, so I hope to work on it a bit more in my free time.
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Intermediate Kanji Book (Kanji 1000 Plus)
Intermediate Kanji Book (Kanji 1000 Plus) by Tieko Kanou (Paperback - January 1, 1993)
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