The first and last paragraph of the Introduction "Thoughout most of history Japan has been remote from us of the West and all but unknown-but when it has broken through its isolation to come to our attention, it has never failed to amaze us. When the Portuguese and then other Europeans first came to Japan in the middle of thee 16th Century, they found this feudal land reminiscent of their own and, appreciaciating the familiar, decided that the Japanese were most admirable of all asian peoples. Later, when Japan, after more than two hundred years of self-impsed isolation, was "rediscovered" in the middle of the 19th Century, it soon astounded Europeans by its unique abitily among all non-Western lands to close with speed the technological gap that had opened up between the West and the rest of the world." Behind Japan's great achievements lies a very special historical narrative. This is wat Mr. Leonard tells with skill and grace, covering the period from Japan's Shadowy beginnings as a backward land on the edges of the civilized world, to the time when the pattern of its own cultural greatness had become well set by the early 17th Century. Edwin O. Reischauer U.S. Ambassador to Japan, 1961-1966