Asia Books
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Beautiful PiecesReview Date: 2008-03-21
Great graphics!Review Date: 2002-12-19
My favorite needlework book!Review Date: 2002-08-18
Beautiful!Review Date: 1999-04-05
Not your grandmother's needlepointReview Date: 2000-02-17

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UnbelievableReview Date: 2005-05-06
History as a personal questReview Date: 2006-04-30
Magnificently DisturbingReview Date: 2006-02-25
Dealing with Mass Murderers Review Date: 2006-01-06
The author, along the way, adds his personal experiences and interesting observations about Phnom Penh and Cambodia in the 1990s and up until 2003. He interviews a large number of Cambodians, including guards and survivors, about the goings on at the notorious S-21 prison. As many as twenty thousand entered the prison; fewer than a dozen survived. There are photos of some of the murdered and the survivors and several historic photos of Khmer Rouge soldiers. The author delves into the mentality of the mass murderers and present day Cambodians who still suffer the trauma of that horrific era.
Chapter two in this book is one of the best brief descriptions of the Khmer Rouge takeover of Cambodia and its consequences that I have read. All in all the book is a readable introduction to the sordid history of the Khmer Rouge and the half-hearted international efforts to cope with mass murder and its perpetrators.
Smallchief
I Still Wonder WhyReview Date: 2005-05-22
When this was happening we had just ended our participation in the Viet Nam war. I asked a Viet Nam protester why they weren't protesting what was happening there, why are we building a Holocaust museum when something of almost horror was happening in Cambodia. There was no answer.
For a time I thought that it might be an issue of race/color. The Jews were white, the Cambodian brown. Then the happenings in Rawanda got a fair amount of press coverage. And I can only conclude that it was just a matter of time. Viet Nam took all the energy the protestors had, perhaps combined with such a contempt/hatred for our own government that they couldn't see the evil in the Khmer Rouge. Maybe it was the left's "love" for communism that made them blind.
Peter Maguire's book puts a personal and human face on this genocide. He has talked to the people all over Cambodia, he has analyzed the international response and concluded that "international law, human rights, and international criminal courts are little more than sonorous fictions without political will."
There is no political will to even think much about Cambodia, not while it was happening, not now.

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A celebration of a child and grandmother's urban trip and relationshipReview Date: 2006-04-11
Ideal for children 4 to 8Review Date: 2006-02-14
Ideal for children 4 to 8Review Date: 2006-02-14
The Falling FlowersReview Date: 2006-01-04
CaptivatingReview Date: 2006-01-01

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great read, rivetingReview Date: 2000-12-28
rayjoy@ipa.netReview Date: 2000-07-27
been there, done thatReview Date: 1999-12-03
Excellent book that tells what Marine Recon REALLY isReview Date: 1999-08-21
A tense,terrific story that fairly leaps off the pageReview Date: 1998-11-23

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The Flamboya TreeReview Date: 2008-02-16
We do not get to know the role religious faith may have played in Clara Olink Kelly's mother's life prior to the Japanese invasion of Java. However, given the times, her Dutch culture and her social status, one can imagine that she lived a Calvinist role of being a submissive, demure, obediant wife. Religious faith obviously were very important to her during the three and a half concentration camp years as she read scripture stories to her children. One wonders, however, would Clara's mother have survived if she had been alone with no children dependent upon her?
The real downer of this memoir is the betrayal committed by Clara's father. It is not difficult to understand how after nearly four years of being separated from his family and all that he endured in working on construction of the railroad line over the River Kwai, that he would be most vulnerable to entering into an extra-marital relationship, especially not knowing if his family was even alive. However, once he knew they had survived, it seems he did not give a hoot. He was totally responsible for his wife and children languishing four more months in an Allied concentration camp. In the meantime he enjoyed himself exploring post-war business opportunities.
The result of his neglect was that his wife's berberi worsened and his son nearly died. We do not know but perhaps Mr. Olink was a jerk from the beginning. If so, then after the war he took being a jerk to a whole new heighth!
This reviewer is not like the others who have commented here so far. I had no relatives who experienced anything like what Clara Olink Kelly describes. However, Paul, an acquaintance of mine who is from Holland, tells how it was that his parents and younger siblings endured the Japanese concentration camp in Sumatra. Paul's father also was a forced laborer on the River Kwai rail line. Paul's mother and siblings experienced the same deprived and depraved conditions as Claras' family. Paul's family came out of the ordeal as an intact family. Clara was not so fortunate.
Some readers might wonder how Clara, nearly six decades later, could possibly remember the "exact" words uttered by the others in her life when she was but four to seven or eight years old at the time. We must remember that all autobiography's and memoirs reveal a process that we all go through as we tell our life stories. We repeat those stories over and over again until we get them "right."
The Flamboya Tree: Memories of a Mother's Wartime CourageReview Date: 2002-04-15
Excellent!Review Date: 2006-11-04
Great readingReview Date: 2002-09-03
Very touchingReview Date: 2002-07-03
This is a part of history that people should know about. We know about Japan invading Pearl Harbor,and other places, but what we don't know is the people who became effected by the war.
Clara tells this story so well, she makes you feel like you are there seeing all the tragic events yourself.
This is one book that I would highly recommend to everyone, I think we can learn a great deal from it and have a better understanding of war itself.

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THE BEST book in my kitchenReview Date: 2007-03-13
Great book with simple, straightforward recipesReview Date: 2006-10-18
best $15 spent, if you like to cook, and enjoy Thai food, etc.Review Date: 2007-09-05
Southern Girl in ColoradoReview Date: 2006-03-30
Culinary diversity and ethnic meal-time authenticityReview Date: 2004-06-06


rich and wonderful textReview Date: 2006-07-10
The theory of decadence of Persian Empire was introduced by some scholars and it has dominated the
Studies of ancient Persia but this book gives us an opportunity to study new evidence and to overcome the Hellenocentric view which has infiltrated Iranian studies.
I salute Pierre Briant for his dedication and love for Iranian history and for giving us such a valuable
Book and I recommend this book to readers with passion for Iranian history and to those who seek the truth about the past.
Great!Review Date: 2008-06-25
IranReview Date: 2006-03-21
Herodotus OvercomeReview Date: 2004-11-15
Pierre Briant has sought to overcome this long-ingrained Greco-centric view of the Persian empire through a very detailed & deeply analytical history which integrates all existing knowledge on the first full-scale Empire in Southwest Asia. Writing originally in French in mid-90s, Briant approaches this history with 1) an analytical approach to the political narrative which seeks to lay bare the ideological elements ingrained in the Greek texts and 2) a sweeping overview of the politico-socio-economical organization of the vast Empire built on evidence verified on local levels. What emerges clearly was the Persian Empire as a viable politico-economical super-structure that layered on top of deep-rooted local traditions. The Empire infrastructure sustained for the 200 years that the classical Greek culture flourished, and that this infrastructure was inherited-- though not sustained-- by Alexander and his companions through conquest.
This is a heavy tome as Briant tried to overcome a very deep-rooted academic historiographical tradition, so at times the writing can be tedious. Also, this book does not seek to cover Zoroastrianism at all (beyond describing the royal Achaemenid ideology which the author neither identifies nor disscoiates with Zoroastrianmism). However, the freshness in perspectives, plus the very well-rendered, top quality translation, makes the book a truly 'value-for-money' purchase in my view.
Achaemenid PersiaReview Date: 2004-12-19
This book is not light reading for the casual dilletante, it is a scholarly book by a world renowned author who has produced the last book to be writted on the Achaeminid Persian Empire pending the discovery of a huge new archive of inscribed tablets that will provide a new book A NEW LOOK AT THE PERSIAN EMPIRE: THE X CUNEIFORM TABLET ARCHIVES.
I took a course on the Achaemenid Persian Empire from Professor Pierre Briant when he was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago's Oriental Institute in 1997 when I was in graduate studies in ancient history there. He is fully conversant in every piece of literature and archaeological evidence on the subject.
Be prepared for a lot of reading, the book is 1196 pages long,everything is referenced. The actual text starts on page 13 and ends on page 876, the other 300 pages are research notes, pages 977 to page 1050. There are indexes on personal names and topics. The Bibliography is from page 1059 to page 1124, a full 65 pages!
Those of you interested in numismatics will be sorely disappointed unless you have been unable to find a convenient genealogical table of the Achaemenid Dynasty
My own interest at the present time is in anceint weapons, also an area that is not covered by this book. I for one would like to see a book titled ARMS AND ARMAMENT OF THE ANCIENT ACHAEMENID PERSIAN EMPIRE that would illustrate swords, daggers, spears, missile weapons, armor, helmets, horse trappings, chariots and anything else in the field.
If you share my interest in ancient weapons, please feel free to join http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ancientweapons or emai me at jpisc98357@aol.com. For those of you interested in a broader based discussion of anceint Iran, there has been a new discussion group formed. Go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Iranica-L There is not yet any content to the group which has staked out the eras from pre history until the Muslim conquest in the 7th Century.
There is a good site if you are interested in the Parthians at:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Parthia-L The participants of this group are heavily into numismatics.
This book is not a good source for artifact studies, there are no photographs at all and the iconography illustrated is all done with line drawings. The maps are adequate but are not plentiful.
For those interested in a supplement to this book that will give you a real taste of what the Empire's captial looked like, I would recommend Persepolis Recreated, a book and DVD that reconstructs the great palaces of Persepolis using modern graphics technology. It is available for $85. from the producer, Farzin Rezaeian. Call (708)386-2720 to place your order.
Best regards, John Piscopo

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Great look at the Korean Side of the conflictReview Date: 2006-01-19
Same War, Different Angle.Review Date: 2007-03-28
What makes this book important is that it covers the same war as many other books, but that it is written not from an American viewpoint but from the view of a soldier whose country was being attacked. This has made the Association of the United States Army (AUSA) through its Institute for Land Warfare put this title on their list of books that should be kept in print for study by AUSA members and others concerned about important issues.
This book was first published in 1992, the copies being sold by Amazon are reprints of the original book.
Excellent memoir and very insightfulReview Date: 2006-06-25
What makes this book sobering is when the General describes how thousands of South Koreans volunteered and were sent straight into combat with little training, only to quickly become casualties themselves, sacrificing their lives for their country. Another key item from the General's writing is how only after having the time to fully train, equip, and organize into Divisions with adequate firepower, were they able to successfully conduct offensive operations.
Bravery and courage helped them hold against the North Korean Communist attack along the desperate Pusan perimeter, but it was the firepower of the attached US artillery units that were supporting his South Korean Division that allowed them to counterattack successfully and reach Panmunjom.
The personal family dangers in war is also brought out where he writes about his family, who had to be left behind in Seoul, unable to flee when the North Koreans captured the city. The additional suffering of the civilian populace is also described in this book, caught trying to flee the Communist Army.
Highly recommended reading for the South Korean view of the war. Excellent insight into how important it is to have trained and properly equipped soldiers when fighting a war rather than relying on conscripted soldiers after war has started as the conscripted soldiers will suffer excessive casualties and deaths when fighting against a motivated, trained, and fully armed enemy.
A different perspective on the war in KoreaReview Date: 2000-05-15
The Korean War from the neglected South Korean PerspectiveReview Date: 2005-04-05
Yes, it was true that the ROK army at the time were not up to American Army standards, but it's not fair to put the same expectations on them. It doesn't take a genius to know what happens when militia goes against a heavily equipped professional army head-to-head in the open field. Militia loses every time, just look at how the British man handled continental armies in the first few years of the Revolutionary War. In 1950 the ROK army was the equivalent of a militia as it was very much under equipped, with no armor, air force and very little artillery (some 60mm and 80mm mortars and a few light 105mm pieces).
The U.S. had purposely left the ROK army under equipped and it was designed from the ground up as a lightly armed anti-guerilla force. The ROK army had a very poor junior officer corps, there was not school to train junior officers. The U.S. was too preoccupied in rebuilding Japan and sent very limited funds to South Korea. Proper equipment was not sent, no school for junior officers was established. Anyone who knows something about military matters knows that the backbone of an effective army are the junior officers, the lieutenants, captains and majors that lead the troops into the teeth of enemy fire. The North Korean Army (NKA), on the other hand, had an effective junior officer corps because many of the veterans were anti-Japanese guerilla fighters. Furthermore, the Russians supplied NKA with T-34 tanks, YAK fighter bombers, 155mm artillery, etc. Heavy artillery, tanks and close air support gave the NKA heavy offensive power.
It is not mentioned very often, but American trooped faired NO BETTER against the NKA during the first few months of the war. 24th ID troops ran from their positions when their antiquated WWII era bazookas just scratched the paint off NKA T-34s. It was carrier based air power that saved the Americans from being overrun.
General Paik tells stories of desperate battles, where ROK soldiers wrapped satchel charges around their bodies and threw themselves in suicide missions onto NKA tanks. ROK soldiers did the best they could with the weapons and training they had on hand. General Paik provides a fair and often underappreciated reason for why ROK units faired badly in the early part of the Korean War. As far as I'm concerned, any student of the Korean War cannot consider himself a expert unless he's read Paik's book. It is wrong to not put into consideration the viewpoint of the nation that contributed the most manpower and had the most casualties of all the UN forces. No Korean War library can be considered complete without this book (how many Korea War books have a glowing foreword by Mathew B. Ridgeway himself, huh?).
General Paik Sun Yup was the 29 year old commander of the ROK 1st division. The 1st ROK division had the distinction of the only ROK unit that never retreated from their positions without orders. It was also the only ROK unit that was attached to a U.S. Army Corp for the duration of the war and given tasks expected of a regular U.S. infantry division. General Paik was adamant about the fact that given the proper artillery, armor and air support, the 1st ROK division always performed as well, if not better then any regular U.S. infantry division. The 1st ROK also had the distinction of being the first UN unit to enter Pyongyang, beating several better equipped U.S. units in the race to the NK capital.

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comment on important typoReview Date: 1999-06-05
A Nation Under SiegeReview Date: 2001-05-13
Among East Timor's striking characteristics is the fact that it may be the strongest seat of Catholicism on Earth today. Over 85% Catholic (less than half was in the 1960's) its rate of practicing members puts most other countries to shame. The cathedral's 6 a.m. weekday Mass regularly has an overflow crowd of 1000+. John Cardinal O'Connor once told Bishop Belo how envious he was at East Timor's teeming seminarians. Even its Indonesian occupiers concede the Church's massive influence. Although they disdain Bishop Belo for his tireless devotion to human rights, they often unhappily allow him to mediate disputes with Timorese resistance fighters.
The East Timorese greatly need this faith because the world has turned a blind eye toward the genocide inflicted upon them. Those of us in America who seethed under the reign of Bill Clinton probably never realized how culpable he was for tacitly approving these crimes against humanity. The author on numerous occasions sites examples where the United States after decades of inexplicable silence at Indonesia predation became a veritable proponent when Clinton--abandoning his campaign rhetoric about the suffering East Timorese--wanted expanded trade with the highly populated interloper. Bishop Belo is probably the only person in history to be awarded a Nobel peace Prize without a word of praise or congratulations from the Unites States Government because it was bestowed at a very inconvenient time for pending trade deals.
The island nation faces an uncertain future, and all Catholics and others concerned with human rights should monitor the situation closely. Despite the unending brutal assaults bravely endured by the East Timorese citizens, their bold faith is a good omen that eventually their struggle will be victorious.
A moving biography of a great man...and a stunning indictmenReview Date: 1999-09-08
A luminous and timely biography of a courageous figure.Review Date: 1999-05-15
Review by David Hinkley, former Chairman, Amnesty International USA
Arnold Kohen's moving biography of Roman Catholic Bishop Carlos X. Belo of East Timor illuminates one of modern history's most horrific human rights tragedies. Belo, the first Catholic bishop ever to receive the Nobel Prize for Peace (1996) is revealed as a great humanitarian in the tradition of Archbishop Romero and Desmond Tutu. In this age of cynicism and disillusionment, Belo exemplifies the power of faith, dedication and indefatigable effort to reshape the history of a terrorized and nearly forgotten people.
Kohen, formerly an investigative reporter with NBC news, skilfully balances lyrical evocations of a lush land, its tortured people and their unsilenceable champion with incisive analysis of the political and church forces with which Belo has contended in his successful struggle to bring his people's plight to the world's attention. Since Indonesia invaded the island territory, for centuries a Portuguese colony, the Indonesian army's campaign of brutal suppression has left an estimated 200,000 dead, of a population of less than 700,000. Beginning with the acquiescence of President Ford and Secretary Kissinger at the time of the 1975 invasion, through provision of deadly OV10 Bronco counter-guerrilla planes and other military hardware, the United States has played a complicitous role. This has only recently been mitigated - and to a lethally insufficient extent - by Clinton Administration diplomatic overtures to Jakarta.
Such examinations share these pages with indelible images of Belo the man. Among the most emblematic is a glimpse of Belo the boy athlete and mischief maker donning a grapefruit bishop's hat in a foreshadowing of his astonishing future. Belo's great love of East Timor's young people and his sardonic wit emerge as defining traits, along with the courage to confront a combination of forces that would wither almost anyone. Against a backdrop of genocide and international intrigue, Kohen has created a luminous, touching and fascinating portrait of an inspiring and unforgettable man. This one is for the ages.
Chilling, clear, direct... unfortunately it's all trueReview Date: 2001-04-06

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A quick study of "Who's Who" in the search industryReview Date: 1999-02-22
Bravo, Nancy!Review Date: 1999-03-30
A 'must' for every CEOReview Date: 1999-03-09
A first in the retainer executive search fieldReview Date: 1999-02-22
An excellent guide for companies and individuals alikeReview Date: 1999-02-22
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