Description

Book Synopsis

''Sacred, ferocious, and businesslike, Adelstein describes the Japanese mafia like nobody else'' Roberto Saviano, on Tokyo Vice

Makoto Saigo is half-American and half-Japanese in small-town Japan with a set of talents limited to playing guitar and picking fights. With rock stardom off the table, he turns toward the only place where you can start from the bottom and move up through sheer merit, loyalty, and brute force -- the yakuza.

Saigo, nicknamed ''Tsunami'', quickly realizes that even within the organization, opinions are as varied as they come, and a clash of philosophies can quickly become deadly. One screw-up can cost you your life, or at least a finger.

The internal politics of the yakuza are dizzyingly complex, and between the ever-shifting web of alliances and the encroaching hand of the law that pushes them further and further underground, Saigo finds himself in the middle of a defining decades-long battle that will determine the future

Trade Review
'Adelstein tells Saigo's story with a relish for its comic aspects [and] an understated feeling for its pathos... one comes away from The Last Yakuza finding its subject not just sympathetic, but even lovable' * Telegraph *
'The Last Yakuza might be a work of non-fiction, but it reads more like a thriller... a gripping read' * Irish News *

The Last Yakuza

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    £15.29

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    RRP £16.99 – you save £1.70 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 17 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Jake Adelstein

    Out of stock

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      Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 01/02/2024
      ISBN13: 9781472109156, 978-1472109156
      ISBN10: 1472109155
      Also in:
      True crime

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      ''Sacred, ferocious, and businesslike, Adelstein describes the Japanese mafia like nobody else'' Roberto Saviano, on Tokyo Vice

      Makoto Saigo is half-American and half-Japanese in small-town Japan with a set of talents limited to playing guitar and picking fights. With rock stardom off the table, he turns toward the only place where you can start from the bottom and move up through sheer merit, loyalty, and brute force -- the yakuza.

      Saigo, nicknamed ''Tsunami'', quickly realizes that even within the organization, opinions are as varied as they come, and a clash of philosophies can quickly become deadly. One screw-up can cost you your life, or at least a finger.

      The internal politics of the yakuza are dizzyingly complex, and between the ever-shifting web of alliances and the encroaching hand of the law that pushes them further and further underground, Saigo finds himself in the middle of a defining decades-long battle that will determine the future

      Trade Review
      'Adelstein tells Saigo's story with a relish for its comic aspects [and] an understated feeling for its pathos... one comes away from The Last Yakuza finding its subject not just sympathetic, but even lovable' * Telegraph *
      'The Last Yakuza might be a work of non-fiction, but it reads more like a thriller... a gripping read' * Irish News *

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