Self-learner needing advice...
I have 4 contenders listed below, and I’d really appreciate experienced feedback. I've researched Genki and already decided against it. To give a better idea of what I’m looking for, here is a wish list I’ve thrown together:
+I want the pitch accents of vocab to somehow be outlined. And I want something with up-to-date vocabulary, not talking about VHS and snail mail, etc. Along those same lines I don't want all the dialogue to be about student life.
+I’m keen on seeing kanji regularly so I’ll begin to recognize them. (with furigana would be ideal.) If there were graphics of how their etymology evolved=WOOOOW!
+I want to be able to create my own sentences, so I am looking for a “grammar bible” that I can actually READ. (Not too technical/stuffy/long-winded prattle. It makes my brain turn off.) However, if a book is stellar in every other way but grammar is a bit weak, I can always get “Japanese Verbs and Essentials of Grammar” or something like that.
+Online resources/audio are a perk, but not a necessity.
An Introduction to Modern Japanese: Volume 1, Grammar Lessons
by Richard John Bowring & Haruko Uryu Laurie
It’s use of full kana and kanji in example sentences reminds me of iknow, so I sort of fell in love with that. (It makes me face the language square on instead of jumping to the translation before reading through.) However, because I won’t be able to select+copy+past new words into jisho.org, I can see the honeymoon going sour VERY fast. Does anyone have experience with this book? Do you like it? I could only view the first chapter, if that.
vs
Japanese for Everyone: A Functional Approach to Daily Communication
by Susumu Nagara
I can only see the first few pages on Amazon.com. The example is not even a lesson so much as “how to pronounce Japanese”. But it does an awesome job. I like the brackets used to explain rhythm, and she had these dot-graph looking things for accent patterns. Does the rest of the book continue using that chart when new vocabulary is introduced? It is so cool.
vs
Japanese for College Students I: Text (Japanese for College Students Vol. 1)
by International Christian University
Also seems very good, and uses kana. They claim to have “plentiful examples” which is NICE for grammar. Uses Casset tapes, so I am dubious about how contemporary it is. Leaning towards this because of price, but will I be buying time wasted? (that I could have had a good text book with.)
Minna no Nihongo from http://www.3anet.co.jp/english/books/books_01.html also looks intriguing but I couldn't find any nitty-gritty reviews. Is it good?
Thank you!