In
The Human Revolution, a narrator named Shin'ichi Yamamoto tells the story of the Soka Gakkai between 1945 and the beginning of the 1960s. The book is inspired by epic novels, like
Romance of the Three Kingdoms, and the style of French
Romantics, like Victor Hugo or Romain Rolland. The novel was self-published by the Soka Gakkai and printed in 30 volumes. It has sold millions of copies to Soka Gakkai's members, and has been translated into several other languages. Although Soka Gakkai teaches its members that the work is its "correct history", it is a semi-fictionalized treatment of it. It is also used as a rite of passage: recruits have to read it entirely and "produce evidence of results (
seiseki), either by converting one household to Soka Gakkai or securing one new subscription to
Seikyō shinbun... The Gakkai thus regards mastery of the organization's history, represented as Ikeda's literary biography, as the true test of faithful adherence." == Related works ==