Bonus

The novella Arrowroot is often published in a dual edition with a so-called Secret History that delves into this character’s sadomasochistic relationship with his foe’s wife. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this title character of a nearly thousand-page-long, 1935 novel by Eiji Yoshikawa that climaxes with a battle in which he wields a weapon carved from a boat’s oar.
ANSWER: Miyamoto Musashi [or Miyamoto Musashi; or Musashi Miyamoto; or Musashi; accept The Secret History of the Lord of Musashi]
[10e] This novelist wrote that “Secret History” of Musashi. Edward Seidensticker translated two of this novelist’s titles that are idioms about “water pepper-eating bugs” and “falling snow,” Some Prefer Nettles and The Makioka Sisters.
ANSWER: Jun’ichiro Tanizaki [or Tanizaki Jun’ichiro]
[10m] Perhaps the best-known fictional treatment of feudal Japanese history in the West is this 1975 James Clavell novel about John Blackthorne.
ANSWER: Shōgun
<AP, World Literature>

EditionsHeardPPBEasy %Medium %Hard %
15712.8160%60%9%

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Conversion

TeamOpponentPart 1Part 2Part 3TotalParts
DukeLiberty B0000
Liberty AUNC D010010E
South CarolinaLiberty C0000
UNC BVirginia Tech A1001020HM
Virginia AUNC C010010E
William & MaryWake Forest010010E

Summary

TournamentEditionHeardPPBEasy %Medium %Hard %
Florida2025-02-01310.0033%67%0%
Great Lakes2025-02-0168.3367%17%0%
Lower Mid-Atlantic2025-02-0168.3350%17%17%
Midwest2025-02-01220.00100%100%0%
North2025-02-01310.0033%67%0%
Northeast2025-02-01516.0060%60%40%
Overflow2025-02-01518.0080%80%20%
Pacific Northwest2025-02-0125.0050%0%0%
Southeast2025-02-0147.5025%50%0%
UK2025-02-011015.0060%80%10%
Upper Mid-Atlantic2025-02-01820.00100%100%0%
Upstate NY2025-02-0133.330%33%0%