Finished this first book on the Magic: the Gathering - Kamigawa cycle. The story is quite entertaining, but many of the terms used are unfamiliar to me (I guess if you know Japanese you may understand). The story is fast-paced and is an easy read. The plot is more or less quite simple since we know from the start there is something 'wrong' with Konda... the story just moved along towards the last part when everything was revealed.
The downside of this novel is that there is little character development and the characters felt rather one-dimensional. But that's to be expected of a thin paperback fantasy novel, I guess. I would say this is one of the better MtG novels... I hadn't enjoyed many MtG novels since the Invasions cycle, Brother's War book 1, and some of the Anthologies.
Unlike the comments on amazon.com, I don't really find Toshi to be too powerful... afterall there were several occasions when he was overpowered. Plus he's not able to use his Kanji magic at will and actually need some time to inscribe the character - quite realistically depicting the weakness of a wizard or mage. Most of the time Toshi had to find some creative ways to get out of a fix instead of just muscling through (unlike Kamahl in Onslaught). All in all, this character feels rather like Gord the Rogue in Gary Gygax's old Greyhawk series, or Fritz Leiber's Grey Mouser.
One thing I don't quite understand is how towards the end the Myojin of Night's Reach (5/3 on card stats) can overcome the more powerful Myojin of Life's Web (8/8) - although they're both indestructible.
One reviewer in Amazon commented he was disappointed at the lack of Legends in the book despite this being a Legends-rich cycle. I disagree, as there were more legends than I had expected... there was Konda, the twins, Nagao, Ben-Ben, Kiku, Takeno, Marrow, and honorable mention of Godo...
The kanji magic is actually not something new... I saw something similar in one of my Japanese comics. But I like some of the encounter where the use of this kanji magic was quite imaginative - eg the word on the roof to immobilize his enemies. Many times I actually wished the author wrote the symbol of the kanji to show what it looked like (I guess should be same as Chinese) - it would've enhanced the reading experience. For example, Dan Brown's Angels & Demons actually printed the symbols etc to show how they looked like.
Looking forward to the 2nd book where I think the Keiga dragons make an appearance...