Postby Airth » September 16th, 2006 12:54 am
I am also a supporter of the method, and would recommend the books as a complement to your kanji study routine. Heisig helped me to see kanji in a new way that made learning them enjoyable and stimulating. After I started using the books I realised that the barrier the characters placed between me and the language hiding behind it was in fact scalable and no cause for frustration.
If I was going to start it again I would learn stories that encapsulated both the writing and the reading; I really don't believe that you have to finish book 1 before you can start book 2. I would also take a very flexible approach to the chosen keywords. Too often I found he uses archaic or unfamiliar words that I realised were much better to ignore and substitute for my own, as much as possible doing away with English.
The best endorsement I can give it is that I now read the Joyo kanji without hesitation, and I can write them as long as I know which kanji I need. That last step is perhaps the hardest; knowing how to put the kanji together in context, but that's a whole other story.
One final thing, while the books are important nothing has helped me more than the set of kanji cards that support them. Those cards and my electronic dictionary were two of the best investments I ever made.