Isolation is depressing and hopeless, just like walking a barren street in a collapsing ghost town. However, what is necessary to show that life can really exist anywhere is ordinary flower buds among desolate people. This is similar to Steven's journey at Samurai Garden. The novel is about a sick Chinese boy, Steven, who traveled to a Japanese village during the Sino-Japanese War to recover from illness. By building connections with several locals and hearing their stories, he soon became a young adult.
In an ideal world, all son-in-law relationships are like love and unity as shown in "Beaver" comedy. Unfortunately, we do not live in a perfect world. Even Samurai Garden written by Gail Tsukiyama is a fictitious story that solves real human relations problems. These are questions that everyone can reach, such as nonverbal fathers who do not express feelings. However, the relationship the son searches with their father is often born with others. This is just due to Stephen TB, what happened when Stephen spent a pleasant time in Japan in Japan. Stephen discovered the difference in personality between his father and Mazu and the realization of a beautiful connection with him and Mazu slowly growing up.
In the Edo era of Japan, Basso was born into a lower ranked warrior when the Japanese art and culture flourished and the world prospered. According to various statements, they only taught literary leaders of Basso, later colleagues of literature, or family owners during the growth period - precise relationship still to be understood. His literary interest led him to create the most popular and elaborate verses of his time.
In 1702, Japanese warrior Yoshiyasu Yanagisawa of the Edo period (1603-1868) founded Rikugien. He served Tokugawa Tsunayoshi of Tokugawa Chagan, his favorite. The general officer gave the ruins that became the basis of the garden. It is intended to reflect part of traditional Japanese poetry which is a poem in Japanese classical literature. "Rokiyuen" is a system that classifies Chinese poetry into six categories. This system also influenced the division of Waka poems. The number 6 is usually "roku", but in the case of the garden name it is pronounced as "riku". This is consistent with the pronunciation of Chinese words.