Home :: Books :: Sports  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports

Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Dynamic Karate: Instruction by the Master

Dynamic Karate: Instruction by the Master

List Price: $30.00
Your Price: $19.80
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent book for students of Japanese karate
Review: I'm a relatively new karate student (yellow belt), and this is the first karate book I've read. It had exactly what I was looking for; information to help me fine tune the techniques I've been learning. The information on the back of the book says it includes "the fundamentals plus the fine points", and it really does, including pictures, written descriptions and Japanese karate vocabulary as well as general tips and information on the history of karate. The price is good,too. I did not buy it from Amazon, and I paid a discounted price of $25.20.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A Little Disappointing
Review: I'm still a Karate novice but most of what this book had to say sounded old. If you are taking Karate classes with a decent teacher, you can skip this book. Most of the advice will already be familiar to you. Save 30 bucks for a better book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A Little Disappointing
Review: I'm still a Karate novice but most of what this book had to say sounded old. If you are taking Karate classes with a decent teacher, you can skip this book. Most of the advice will already be familiar to you. Save 30 bucks for a better book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must Have !
Review: This book includes detailed description of almost every Shotokan Hand and Foot techniques. The techniques are executed by Nakayama Sensei himself and by such great assistant as Kanazawa Sensei, Enoeda Sensei, Ochi Sensei ... So to be short, the very best JKA Karate specialists demonstrate all the techniques of Shotokan Karate-Do with great detail and explanations. One point : there's NO katas in this book, but what the helle, there arae a lot of other books dealing with them specifically (have a look at the Best Karate Series also by Nakayama Sensei). Get this book and you won't regret it, for the beginner, the advanaced student and also the instructor.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good for almost anyone
Review: This book is an odd one. It doesn't have much on the spiritual aspects of karate, which some readers find unhealthy. It doesn't have any kata, although some practice steps are shown in the back in a way that suggests kata. Some readers find this lack of kata to be a minus. Other reviewers find the book, well, boring. I have books on my shelf by Hee Il Cho, Bruce Lee, Joe Lewis, etc and they are certainly more photogenic than the author of Dynamic Karate. However...I keep coming back again and again to this book because it is a gold mine of traditional karate. Just about every technique, move, stance, etc you can imagine is somewhere in this book. It has the air of authority because of the author and who trained him. In these pages live and breathe, if you stare at the pictures long enough, the Real Thing. The Real Thing is the karate that was distilled for generations into what Funakoshi taught. I find myself studying the pictures because I know that the techniques portrayed cannot be done any better than by Nakayama. The real central core of Japanese karate is in these pictures and in these pages. I believe that this book is better for people that have studied for awhile rather than for the novice. There are better books for novices than this tome. However, if you want to really see a master, and see what that master believed was THE way to do almost any of your favorite techniques, then get this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Essential manual
Review: This book is now 35 years old and is still the best handbook you can get on Karate. Nakayama has excellent photos and detailed descriptions of the all the techniques. This book and Oyama's "This is Karate" and "Advanced Karate" are the three greatest manuals ever written on the subject.

The book contains no forms, so it is all techniques. But that's okay, as learning the forms from a book is just about impossible, unless you've had a lot of previous training or already know them and just need to remind yourself about a forgotten move. Nakayama's other books have the Shotokan forms, if you want them, and Oyama's books contain most of the Kyokushin Kai Goju forms.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Essential manual
Review: This book is now 35 years old and is still the best handbook you can get on Karate. Nakayama has excellent photos and detailed descriptions of the all the techniques. This book and Oyama's "This is Karate" and "Advanced Karate" are the three greatest manuals ever written on the subject.

The book contains no forms, so it is all techniques. But that's okay, as learning the forms from a book is just about impossible, unless you've had a lot of previous training or already know them and just need to remind yourself about a forgotten move. Nakayama's other books have the Shotokan forms, if you want them, and Oyama's books contain most of the Kyokushin Kai Goju forms.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Essential manual
Review: This book is now 35 years old and is still the best handbook you can get on Karate. Nakayama has excellent photos and detailed descriptions of the all the techniques. This book and Oyama's "This is Karate" and "Advanced Karate" are the three greatest manuals ever written on the subject.

The book contains no forms, so it is all techniques. But that's okay, as learning the forms from a book is just about impossible, unless you've had a lot of previous training or already know them and just need to remind yourself about a forgotten move. Nakayama's other books have the Shotokan forms, if you want them, and Oyama's books contain most of the Kyokushin Kai Goju forms.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An excellant extension to KarateDo Kyohan.
Review: This book not only shows you examples of how to correctly perform techniques, but also shows you examples of how techniques performed poorly can leave openings for your opponent. This is an excellant book for all levels of Shotokan Karateka.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Great Training Resource For Any/All Karate Students
Review: This is an excellent reference material for anyone who studies karate.

It covers kicking, punching, striking, blocking, countering moves, and even some training methods. Every page is full of pictures which show the technique "frame by frame." Each technique is fully documented and tips and training methods are provided.

As always, this book is not a "Learn Karate in Ten Easy Steps," nor does it contain unrealistic self-defense techniques (i.e. "What to do if you're attacked in a bathroom from behind by a female wearing a dress while the moon is full.") It is simply an extremely in-depth yet easy to understand guide to the basic moves of karate.

The book is flexible, in that it does not pertain to one style of karate in particular, and is helpful to a student of any rank. I don't study Shotokan, and some of the names were different than the ones I use (Japanese names are given also), but I could easily identify the moves by the pictures.

Although we call them "basics", basics often require the most practice and proper technique. I highly recommend this book to any martial artist who wants to master the fundamentals of karate.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates