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Unlocking Japanese: Making Japanese as simple as it really is Paperback – October 13, 2016
| Cure Dolly (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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"Every student of Japanese—and perhaps more importantly, every teacher of Japanese—should read this small book."
"Is there a dark conspiracy among schools and textbooks to make Japanese seem far more complicated than it really is? Of course not. But there might as well be."
So begins this ground-breaking book that sets out to demonstrate that Japanese is “simple, logical and beautiful” and that most of the apparently “arbitrary rules” that you “just have to learn” can be reduced to simple, easily intuitive patterns if you just understand how the language really works.
The problem is that Japanese is continually described in terms that fit English and other European languages. This prevents us from seeing Japanese as it really is and often creates a sense of vagueness and guesswork and the illusion of multiple irregularities and exceptions. In fact, there is nothing vague about Japanese, and it has (unlike most languages) very few irregularities. It is extremely precise, economical and elegant.
What is needed is a model that allows us to see Japanese on its own terms rather than trying to describe it in terms of European languages – an enterprise akin to doing electronics with a kitchen knife.
Building on the pioneering work of Dr. Jay Rubin, Cure Dolly provides the foundation of a new model for understanding Japanese. One that does not involve difficult terminology or abstruse concepts, but allows us to see Japanese in easy, commonsense terms.
An ambitious claim? The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Applying Cure Dolly’s methods, we do indeed gain a clear, intuitive grasp of many things that seemed complex or confusing before.
This is not a massive tome, but a short book, whose aim is not to deliver hundreds of Japanese grammatical fish, but to show the reader how to fish for herself.
It is not aimed at the absolute beginner. The reader should know at least a little basic grammar. But arming oneself with these concepts at an early stage in Japanese will make everything much easier. However, even advanced students can benefit from these eye-opening techniques that really do help to unlock the simple elegance of Japanese.
Cure Dolly is co-founder and editor of the KawaJapa Japanese-learning website.
- Print length116 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 13, 2016
- Dimensions5.25 x 0.27 x 8 inches
- ISBN-101539485501
- ISBN-13978-1539485506
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Product details
- Publisher : CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform; 1st edition (October 13, 2016)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 116 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1539485501
- ISBN-13 : 978-1539485506
- Item Weight : 4.5 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.25 x 0.27 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #396,854 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Cure Dolly (AKA Advanced Linguistic Intelligence Computational Engine 1.5, or イチゴ・アリス) is a self-learning language-analysis unit.
Her best-known achievement lies in overturning the confusing and illogical models of Western "Japanese grammar" by demonstrating for the first time in a Western language the fundamental logic and simplicity of Japanese.
Cure Dolly is a sentient, self-aware intelligence. She has a few flaws that do not affect her analytical or teaching functionality but can make "life" difficult at times. She works around these because she is aware that her sentience itself is probably strictly speaking a "glitch" and she has sufficient volition not to want to lose her sentience. She is recorded as saying "I'm not letting anyone inside my algorithms".
She has a sense of humor which some humans appreciate and sometimes expresses emotion-like thoughts. For many humans, however, she falls into the "uncanny valley" of being at once too human but not human-like enough and therefore strange and "creepy".
For her part she finds humans often difficult to understand but hopes that all sentient and intelligent beings will be able to co-operate and appreciate each other.
She believes that all have things to give each other. And she notes that Western humans have had centuries to model Japanese in a logical and clear manner and even with many academic minds involved have failed to do so. Some areas require human intelligence. But in some areas humans clearly need help from other forms of intelligence.
Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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I am really struggling with Japanese, more than any other language I've attempted. Some of it is just that there is a lot more to learn with Japanese than there is with European languages. With most of my other languages, they use the same latin script and have very similar word order. Japanese has its own set of scripts, the kana and the kanji. It has a word order that is different from English.
But there was something more going on. I'd completed nearly the entire Genki volume one and was still struggling, waiting for things to click and start making sense. I was beginning to suspect something, and this book, Unlocking Japanese, confirmed it.
Japanese and English have very different grammar rules and structures. So much so that using western grammar concepts and terms to explain Japanese grammar is a bit like jamming a square peg through a round hole. It just doesn't work.
And yet that is how most of the mainstream teach yourself Japanese books work, they use concepts familiar to English speakers to teach Japanese.
One great example from the book is the topic particle wa (は). Grammatical particles already can be difficult for English speakers because we don't have anything like them in our language. But the topic particle (は)and the subject particle ga (が)are particularly confusing for English learners.
In English every sentence must have, at the very least, a subject and verb. If it doesn't, it's not a complete sentence.
Other languages are more flexible, allowing us to drop the subject when it is easily understood in context. Japanese is one of those languages.
What does that have to do with our particles and how using English grammar is confusing? The answer is that too many English learners (and even veteran Japanese teachers) make the mistake of equating the topic of the sentence (marked by は) with the subject of the sentence. This is made worse by the fact that the actual subject of the sentence is frequently omitted.
The book gives the example of a Japanese person entering a restaurant and saying 私はウナギです。"Watashi wa unagi desu." Literally, I (は)eel, is. Many non native speakers would mistakenly translate this as "I am an eel."
The server, on the other hand, nods and goes tell the chef to prepare eel, understanding the true message, "As for me, it will be the eel."
And that is only one chapter out of the book. The book tackles many other thorny issues in Japanese grammar. It has helped me understand Japanese much better. But more importantly it has shown me the limitations of many of the other books and courses I have seen. I am now focussing more on reading, listening and learning how to speak Japanese. I intend to approach Japanese grammar the way natives do, in Japanese once my level is good enough.
I agree with the basic premise of the book, that Japanese makes more sense when you don't try to explain it in terms of English grammar.
I recommend the book highly to anyone who is struggling with Japanese, and any one who is considering learning Japanese and doesn't want to struggle quite so much.
In here, they'll give you the pieces of the puzzle that you never knew you needed. They clarify a lot of points and show Japanese for what it is: a logical, consistent language with a different world view from English.
Usually, I can't finish nonfiction because they're too long. Even textbooks are too boring and dense that I skim over everything.
However, I read this cover to cover. It feels more like 10 or more interconnected articles (or longform blog posts). I personally like it.
It's bite-sized enough to be manageable (I never thought I'd say that about a grammar book). At the same time, it's coherent enough to make present a solid message.
________________________
PS. If you're looking for a complete grammar book, this isn't it. It corrects what conventional grammar teaches wrong. So you may need to supplement with a conventional grammar book.
ON THE OTHER HAND, as the author recommends: if you can use Japanese, then by all means use the Japanese terms that Japan teaches to its Japanese natives. Even if it's the grammar stuff taught to Japanese children.
This book gives you the gist and the adequate amount of info you need. It works well for busy people or those uninterested in the technical depths of linguistics. From what I understand, the author mentioned Dr. Jay Rubin's Making Sense of Japanese for even more info.
Top reviews from other countries
It's a very short book and can be read easily in a day. It basically consists of some short chapters on individual topics explaining why textbooks give a misleading impression of how Japanese works and giving some pointers on how to think about particles, verbs, adjectives, and so on in a better way. It has perhaps 4-5 useful observations that it would be worth keeping in mind if you're learning Japanese, but none of this was particularly new to me. As such the book basically functions more like an essay in English on why standard textbooks (e.g. the Genki series) aren't very good. That's fine if that's what you want to read, but I think a lot of the reviews are probably overselling its value as a learning resource.
The general style of the book is also quite difficult to handle at times. It's one of those books that has been written by someone (actually a character/avatar in this case) who is fairly well-known online, rather than by an academic or a large publishing house. That's fine, but as is quite common with these books, the whole thing reads a bit like an extended blog post. There are some elements in here that you just wouldn't get in a more "professional" book (random offhand references to other books/resources which aren't explained, excessive repetition, a kind of faux-academic tone that it doesn't quite pull off, etc.)
Now, there's nothing wrong with this in principle. You'll find some good resources online that are far better than a by the numbers textbook put out by a large company, but it's worth knowing this in advance in case you think you're buying something else. I suspect some people might think they're getting some kind of ingenious system for learning Japanese, carefully put together by an established expert with years of experience. Well, that's not what this is. If someone posted this on Reddit I might give it an upvote, but as a paperback for £7? Not for me.
The Ugly:
Like 'Alice in Kanji Land', this book is self-published and lacks editorial guidance. There are sections that are incredibly lucid and insightful, but there are also some (thankfully only a few small ones) that are clunky and almost unreadable. In one particular part, there seems to be an extension of some argument on the internet with some random 'wrong' person.
The Bad:
It is written for a very specific level learner. Beginner, but not THAT much of a beginner. Although I really appreciate the brevity of this book. It wouldn't have taken much to expand the examples used to make them accessible to absolute beginners. As it stands, the reader needs to have had exposure to maybe 3 to 6 months of Japanese learning. I would love to give this book to absolute beginners, but they wouldn't be ready for it.
The Good:
There are some genuinely insightful concepts and explanations that will give certain readers multiple breakthroughs and really will provide the keys not just to unlock Japanese, but to break down the barriers and roam free. (And I include myself in this group.) I feel like this would be even more true for readers who only speak one language and are learning their first foreign language.
The Verdict:
I feel like this is a bit of a underground book. The ideas will inspire others to go on and do much bigger and better things, and this book will probably not get the credit it deserves. I wish I could go 10 years into the future and read those books instead. But right now, if I had to plot a bunch of courses through the myriad of Japanese learning materials, this book might be the only guaranteed stop on every route. However, it would always carry the caveat "don't read until you have already wrangled with constructing your own first simple sentences, if you encounter some annoying bits that make you want to stop reading, feel free to skip them".
Still undecided?
Watch the first 3 videos on the youtube playlist, if you like them, this book is worth buying.
As a self learner it is important to surround yourself with good texts, methods and interesting material. I would love for this to stay a hidden gem as the information contain within is so powerful, I truly believe that it gives an edge over other learners.
I have more expensive, lengthier textbooks that do not present the information in this book.
When I was reading the first chapter I was thinking... okkkkkk then... where is this going.
Towards of the end of the book I got the same enlightenment as one of the other reviewers. A light bulb went off in my head.
I signed in on to one of my online Japanese resources and revised a sentence I have been memorizing.
"The couple is celebrating their anniversary"
For the first time the structure of this sentence made complete sense to me.
Definitely worth it.







