On the 14th of July, 1853, the USS Plymouth, Mississippi, Saratoga,
and Susquehanna sailed into Yokosuka, Japan. The mysterious Black Ships
had arrived.
In this stirring account of a pivotal moment in modern Japanese history,
award-winning author and illustrator team Sean Michael Wilson and Akiko
Shimojima tell the story of the four American Black Ships that arrived
in Japan in 1853 under the command of Commodore Perry to force Japan to
open up to trade. The book compellingly portrays the apprehension and
confusion of the Japanese people witnessing the Black Ships steaming
into view over the horizon; the anxious response of the samurai; the
cat-and-mouse game that ensued; the protracted negotiations; and the
eventual agreement signed on March 31st, 1854, as the Treaty of
Kanagawa. Historically accurate and with an easy-to-read visual format,
Black Ships conveys the personalities of the key figures in the drama:
on one side, Commodore Perry and his captains, and on the other,
Shogunate officials Abe Masahiro and Hayashi Akira. Wilson and Shimojima
vividly capture the atmosphere of threat and change that pervaded Japan
during Bakumatsu, the final years of the Edo period, as the feudal
Tokugawa shogunate took its last breaths and gave way to the new Meiji
government.