
Part of Series
Dalam pergolakan menjelang dekade abad keenam belas, Kekaisaran Jepang menggeliat dalam kekacau-balauan ketika keshogunan tercerai-berai dan panglima-panglima perang musuh berusaha merebut kemenangan. Benteng-benteng dirusak, desa-desa dijarah, ladang-ladang dibakar. Di tengah-tengah penghancuran ini, muncul tiga orang yang bercita-cita mempersatukan bangsa. Nobunaga yang ekstrem, penuh kharisma, namun brutal. Ieyasu yang tenang, berhati-hati, bijaksana, berani di medan perang, dan dewasa. Namun kunci dari tiga serangkai ini adalah Hideyoshi, si kurus berwajah monyet yang secara tak terduga menjadi juru selamat bagi negeri porak-poranda ini. Ia lahir sebagai anak petani, menghadapu dunia tanpa bekal apapun, namun kecerdasannya berhasil mengubah pelayan yang ragu-ragu menjadi setia, saingan menjadi teman, dan musuh menjadi sekutu. Pengertiannya yang mendalam terhadap sifat dasar manusia telah membuka kunci pintu-pintu gerbang benteng, membuka pikiran orang-orang, dan memikat hati para wanita. Dari seorang pembawa sandal, ia akhirnya menjadi Taiko, penguasa mutlak Kekaisaran Jepang. Taiko merupakan karya besar Eiji Yoshikawa, penulis bestseller internasional, yang berisi pawai sejarah dan kekerasan, pengkhianatan dan pengorbanan diri, kelembutan dan kekejaman. Sebuah epik yang menggambarkan kebangkitan feodal Jepang secara nyata.
Author

Pen-name of Yoshikawa Hidetsugu. Yoshikawa is well-known for his work as a Japanese historical fiction novelist, and a number of re-makes have been spawned off his work. In 1960, he received the Order of Cultural Merit. Eiji Yoshikawa (吉川 英治, August 11, 1892 – September 7, 1962) was a Japanese historical novelist. Among his best-known novels, most are revisions of older classics. He was mainly influenced by classics such as The Tale of the Heike, Tale of Genji, Outlaws of the Marsh, and Romance of the Three Kingdoms, many of which he retold in his own style. As an example, the original manuscript of Taiko is 15 volumes; Yoshikawa took up to retell it in a more accessible tone, and reduced it to only two volumes. His other books also serve similar purposes and, although most of his novels are not original works, he created a huge amount of work and a renewed interest in the past. He was awarded the Cultural Order of Merit in 1960 (the highest award for a man of letters in Japan), the Order of the Sacred Treasure and the Mainichi Art Award just before his death from cancer in 1962. He is cited as one of the best historical novelists in Japan.