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Japan At War
 
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Japan At War [Hardcover]

Haruko Cook
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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One of the essential books about World War II. -- Philadelphia Inquirer

Oral history of a compellingly high order. -- Kirkus Reviews

The stories recorded in Japan at War provide insight into the confounding complexity of extreme human behavior during the war. -- San Francisco Chronicle --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Book Description

An oral history of Japan during World War II recounts this terrible conflict through the eyes of the Japanese--soldiers, laborers, newspapermen, artists, musicians, women--who lived through it. 20,000 first printing.

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13 Reviews
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4.8 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars YOU HAVE TO GET THIS BOOK!, Jan 23 2004
This review is from: Japan At War (Paperback)
We read this book in a Non Fiction class that I took. I never would have known to read it otherwise, but I couldn't put it down. Every single story in there is shocking and amazing. This is the stuff they don't teach you in school. The stories are written by bomb victims from Hiroshima, villagers who were told to run at the enemy with grenades and become human bombs, doctors who preformed horrible opperations on the chinese during their occupation, wives of kamakaze pilots, and so many more. I'd recommend it to anyone, and have given it as a gift several times. If you like to know the story behind the "story" then this book is perfect.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Destined to become a classic, July 21 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Japan At War (Paperback)
There is no lack of oral histories of the Second World War as seen by American, British, German, or even Russian participants. It is another matter when one comes to the Japanese. This book is the first important oral history to be presented exclusively from the Japanese side.

The Cooks present dozens of oral histories that are virtually unedited, presenting each interviewee's story just as it was told. The oral histories are grouped into chapters roughly by time period or theme, and each chapter has a succinct introduction that puts the oral histories that follow into their wider historical perspective. Each oral history is introduced with a very brief description of the interviewee, with a minimum of footnotes, often to writings previously published by the interviewee himself.

Because the histories are presented verbatim, one reads each of these stories of the war precisely as the teller of the story wants to remember it, complete with biases and fifty years of selective memory. Being already familiar with the broad historical events of the war, I found this utterly fascinating. There is the convicted war criminal who denies the Rape of Nanking took place, and adamantly refuses to admit that the white objects on the ground in his own collection of photographs are actually dead corpses. Then there is the military doctor who "remembered" performing practice surgery on unanaesthetized Chinese prisoners only after four years of Chinese Communist brainwashing. There's good reason to believe that such atrocities occurred, but did the Chinese force the doctor to recall a repressed memory of a real even, or did they just implant a false memory?

There is the Japanese prisoner of war who helped write propaganda leaflets for the Americans and who recalls his time in America as a POW as one of the happiest in his life. And then there is the Okinawan who tells of crushing his own mother's skull with a rock, because the Japanese military had convinced his family that the Americans were demons who would do unspeakable things to anyone unfortunate enough to fall into their hands alive.

One gets a sense of a people that were totally disconnected from the real war situation, and of a military that completely desensitized its members. There is a dreamlike, or perhaps I should say nightmarish, quality to almost all the interviews. The power of the book lies in the juxtaposition of so many recollections, filled with so many contradictory observations. Sometimes the contradictions are found in the same history, as is the case for the nurse who believes the Americans used poison gas in the battle for Okinawa, but who also professes astonishment at the excellent treatment she received after falling into their hands.

The accounts of the firebombing of Tokyo or the atomic attack on Hiroshima are naturally painful for an American to read. What is astonishing is how little malice the victims feel towards their attackers. There is one victim from Hiroshima who expresses horror that the United States still maintains a nuclear arsenal, but for most of the others the reaction is more like a shrug: "It was war."

This powerful book deserves to become a classic, alongside "All Quiet on the Western Front", "The Diary of a Young Girl," or "With The Old Breed."

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5.0 out of 5 stars A FASCINATING PERSPECTIVE FROM THE OTHER SIDE, Dec 16 2002
By 
Luciano Lupini (Caracas Venezuela) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Japan At War (Paperback)
A remarkable tour through the Japanese war in China in the 1930s, the salvage man to man combats in the Pacific islands, the horrific bombings of Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the aftermath of a totally devastating war on the psyche of the Japanese people.
Haruko Taya and Theodore Cook have done a remarkable reconstruction of this story, through the testimonies of the "other" protagonists.
One cannot came out of this tour, but with another perspective about the motivations and commitment of the people who fought or endured the destruction of this war, from the Japanese side. Common people and soldiers, willing to pay the ultimate price in order to defend their patriotic and religious believes, give a different, individual, impression from the one we derive from the analysis of the motivations of the War Lords and the militaristic complex in Tokyo.
Some fascinating facts are confirmed in this book . We have the story of private Tanisuga Shizuo, gas soldier in China from 1937, candidly telling some truths about the use of poison gas in that front. Now he is seeking compensation from the Japanese Government for the injuries he suffered while making poison gas during the war........ Tominaga Shozo gives a truthful account of the training of soldiers in China. That training included the practice of the proper technique to use the sword to decapitate live prisoners. Also, the last stage of conscript training required him to bayonet a living human, in order to condition soldiers to kill without remorse or hesitation during combat. The book contains some foggy accounts about certain events, like the story told by Tanida Isamu, staff officer in the 10th Army, during the period of the rape of Nanking (self denyal?) about the appalling number of civilians killed in the incident.
But the balance is surely positive, if you consider the moving stories of sacrifice told by the people in the Homeland, and the individual mystical motivations of the soldiers engaged in Special Attacks.
A revealing book, which I consider required reading for those interested in the War in Asia.
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