Asia Books
Related Subjects: Pakistan Thailand China Japan Indonesia South Korea Taiwan India North Korea Malaysia Bangladesh Singapore
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Goodbye,Vietnam is a great student summer read!Review Date: 2005-08-18
Goodbye,VietnamReview Date: 2001-09-28
Wonderful!Review Date: 2001-06-13
GREAT BOOKReview Date: 2000-04-28
For young readers.Review Date: 1999-05-18

As Readable as FortunetellerReview Date: 2002-03-12
What a Fortune Teller Told Me: Tales of the Far EastReview Date: 2001-02-28
A Fortune Teller Told MeReview Date: 2000-03-19
A great pair of eyes.Review Date: 2000-02-24
ExtraordinaryReview Date: 2000-04-19
Naturally, this leads me to wanting to read "Goodnight Mister Lenin", if it can be found. Anyone with a dogeared copy laying around, please let me know!

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TreasureReview Date: 2008-05-03
DelightfulReview Date: 2006-11-14
My 3rd grade son loved this book!Review Date: 2001-10-23
House of Sixty FathersReview Date: 2002-08-11
What an adventure!Review Date: 2004-09-20

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Heartbreaking Story and Very Eye-opening!Review Date: 2008-06-23
The story is gut-wrenching and I have come away, once again, very angry and frustrated with out goverment!
It tells a story of a POW'S wife and her quest for the "real" truth behind her husband's disappearance. The lengths she has gone to to get answers are unreal. She is a hero herself for standing up and never giving up.
This is one of my more favorite books regarding the Vietnam Pow's.
The Stuff of Nightmares, and It's All TrueReview Date: 2007-02-12
Barbara Birchim and Sue Clark pull back the sheets and reveal one of the really big ones. Maybe the biggest of them all -- the calculated decision of our leaders, past and present, to turn their backs on the POWs and MIAs who are still missing.
Barbara's husband, Army Captain Jim Birchim, has been missing in action since something went terribly wrong during a rescue mission in Vietnam in 1968. The story of Barbara's search for details about Captain Birchim's disappearance will break your heart and chill your soul. The response of our own government to her relentless inquiries will shock you to the core.
- Jeff Edwards, award-winning author of Torpedo
Best First Person Version of USG Betrayal of POWs in VNReview Date: 2007-11-28
I have read one previous book on the POWs, Kiss the Boys Goodbye: How the United States Betrayed Its Own POWs in Vietnam but this book, in combination with An Enormous Crime: The Definitive Account of American POWs Abandoned in Southeast Asia makes me very very very angry.
This book is a heart-breaking contrast between the loyalty and love of a woman for her man, and the pathological betrayal by the U.S. Government. We now know that Henry Kissinger is a war criminal (see The Trial of Henry Kissinger, that Johsnon covered up the assassination of Kennedy by CIA-trained Cuban exiles (see Someone Would Have Talked: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the Conspiracy to Mislead History and I am personally persuaded that 9-11 was, as Webster Tarpley tells us 9/11 Synthetic Terror: Made in USA, Fourth Edition.
I recommend all these books to those who would wish to restore the Constitution, smash the corruption of both the Congress (see Running on Empty: How the Democratic and Republican Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It) and the Executive (see Vice: Dick Cheney and the Hijacking of the American Presidency).
Our government, at the political level and with the complicity of our craven flag officers--generals and admirals--is murdering and abandoning American warriors and citizens. ENOUGH! We need complete transparency, and several truth and reconciliation commissions: on the genociding of the Native Americans, on the continued discrimination against people of color, on the virtual colonialism, unilateral militarism, and predatory immoral capitalism that our government embraces "in our name."
ENOUGH. This book had really frightened, and empowered me. ENOUGH.
See also:
Why We Fight
The Fog of War - Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara
Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq
Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth'
Fog Facts: Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin
A REVEIW FROM OUR PASTReview Date: 2007-05-28
POW AFFAIRS S.E. ASIAReview Date: 2007-01-08
Be prepared, reading these books can hit you with emotion, I believe you will learn of a sad chapter in U.S. history- servicemen who deserved better from their government for their efforts during the Vietnam War.

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As close to Japan as a Westerner can getReview Date: 2007-11-03
Donald Richie: What A LifeReview Date: 2007-07-26
Better than a novelReview Date: 2007-07-03
humble and honest obervation of lifeReview Date: 2007-04-07
Informative, fascinating, and movingReview Date: 2006-11-01
I enjoyed seeing Japan through Ritchie's eyes from his first days in the country during the American occupation up through the years of reconstruction, the boom years of the 80s, and the bursting of the bubble. He notes the many changes in the people and is quite honest about his own feelings concerning his privileged position as a foreigner, never fully accepted but also not subject to the same severe social strictures to which Japanese hold each other. Among the many highlights of this fine book are the long train trip across the country that Ritchie takes during the days of the occupation, his friendship with Yukio Mishima as well as many other distinguished people, and his closely observed opinions on the evolution of Japan's stance toward the foreigner. A fine read, particularly recommended to those with an interest in Japan.

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phenomenal bookReview Date: 2007-08-28
TremendousReview Date: 2006-05-29
Emperor Hirohito's wishes actually could foresee a new Japan as it exists today. Quite amazing when viewed from the rubble and destruction of August 1945.
This is how history should be toldReview Date: 2005-04-11
The Pacific War Research Society has truly explored many never-read-before details, and amazingly, without assassinating "minor" characters. This is something very interesting in Japanese history. You will find many rebels in its history, but you will scarcely find traitors. This has for many decades avoided Japan from regime-written history, the tragedy that could not be avoided by most nations.
A must readReview Date: 2005-01-03
Japan's Longest Day - Pacific War Research SocietyReview Date: 2005-08-14
Turns out that most of the pap spouted today about Hirohito being stubborn, intent on winning at all costs, and so on is just that - pap. His primary interest was the welfare of his people and the preservation of the polity. It was Tojo and others who wanted to fight to the death. Astonishing to learn that the broadcast of the "Voice of the Crane" (expressing his unwarlike wish to surrender so minimize destruction and death) had to be done in secrecy and so on. Astonishing insights from Japanese Historians examining their own documents first published in Japanese in 1965, 20 years after the war ended, when they were able to interview most of the many surviving principals - only one refused to be interviewed.
Should be mandatory reading for anyone seriously interested in the last 24 hours before the Surrender of Japan. Information was actually being withheld from Hirohito about the progress of the war by generals but he still got the picture and understood. The best thing he could do to discharge his sacred obligation to secure the welfare and interest of His People was to surrender -with conditions about preservation of the position of Emperor - but not because he was warlke, rather because he understood that the role of Emperor embodied the spirit of the populace and Its preservation was in the best inerest of the country. To lose the Emperor would be to lose the heart and soul of Japan.
The book actually reads like a gripping historical novel even though it is wriitten with the dry unembellished style of academicians & scholars.

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Vietnam start to finishReview Date: 2008-02-12
Parker never wavers from believing that the cause - keeping a country free from a ferocious invader - was noble. He hangs the war's failure on a corrupt and inept South Vietnamese government and failed U.S. decision-making. If some readers find that thesis too uncomplicated, it hardly detracts from Parker's unflinching prose and relentless focus on the people that are the power of this book - youngsters he led who fought and died, fellow officers he loved as brothers, superiors good and not so good, tough and honorable South Vietnamese generals, officious Saigon bureaucrats and ordinary traumatized Vietnamese.
Parker captures the sense of fear and menace, the unreality and futility that are a soldier's daily grind, and in many instances what he calls the "randomness of war." A single misstep off a path and an officer friend is blown to bits by a mine. A fine tank commander laid into a body bag as his tour is soon to end. A fresh young private shot mistakenly by comrades. A stone-faced villager who trips a deadly explosion. Naked terror squirming through tunnels chasing wounded Vietcong. A trusted Vietnamese bodyguard left to fate unknown as the enemy tightens a noose around Saigon.
Parker's straightforward chronology makes compelling structure: unfocused young Southerner joins the Army, finds he has the stuff of an officer, earns medals and manhood in the jungle, survives his one-year tour, comes home to a strangely discordant nation, marries and goes back to college, joins the CIA, returns to Indochina for the end game of the "secret" war in Laos, then finally helps the frenzied exodus from crumbling, beaten South Vietnam - and from a spent and discredited policy.
The men stalking the jungle, firing the artillery, driving the tanks and piloting the jets and choppers will always be heroes to Parker, an unabashed fan of the concept of duty and country. When you meet the men in these pages - Peterson, Dunn, Woolley, Bratcher, Crash, McCoy, Castro, Ayers, Slippery Clunker Six, Duckett, Spencer and many more, it is hard not to buy into Parker's idea that there were indeed good and honorable aspects of this war.
Last Man Out: A Personal Account of the Vietnam WarReview Date: 2007-01-22
Essential ReadingReview Date: 2001-08-14
SuperiorReview Date: 2001-07-09
More than just a war story, this is more or less a biography of James Parker. Since the Vietnam conflict was so lengthy and controversial, it's worthwhile to see how it affected his life after James left combat. This is a guy who saw it all: he hit the beach in knee deep water in the early years, and was one of the last CIA guys to leave the island nation years after the U.S. had abandoned the country militarily.
The best features of this book are James' crystal clear recollections of his war buddies and his involvment in the CIA effort. What other book out there has a detailed personal account of the positively heroic efforts of the secret combat operations after the Army left? Also excellent is James' tense telling of a huge operation to lure the VC into attacking a dummy convoy.
This is a man who has done it all. If you're interested in the Vietnam War, this is requred reading.
A true accounting of his time in the military!Review Date: 2001-02-03


A Look at Japan, a Look at Alan BoothReview Date: 2005-07-21
Booth was a British expatriate writer who moved to Japan to study Noh drama, became disillusioned with it, and ended up a permanent resident of Japan despite that. Looking for the Lost's central theme is the dissonance Booth experiences in his journeys when he attempts to reconcile the Japan of his dreams with the nation he travels through. His portrayals of the people he encounters are sometimes cynical, often humorous, and always insightful. When Japan fails to live up to his expectations, he does not hesitate to poke fun, and the reader is often left with the sense that he feels personally let down by the nation. But allegations that Booth did not like the Japanese ignore that he is as quick to turn his pen on himself as on a passerby. Several particularly memorable segments of the book focus on Booth embarrassing himself! Moreover, Booth balances his cynicism with sympathy: when the author meets a person or place that contains the pieces of Japan he seeks, or a human being he can relate to, his heartfelt joy shines through in his writing. It is in these moments that Alan Booth reveals the most about Japan, and about himself.
The book begins with the "Tsugaru" section. Despite Booth's affection for the region he is traveling through, he never really warms up to the subject matter. He represents the novelist Dazai as an unlikeable fellow, and characterizes the region's connections to Dazai as touristy and lacking authenticity. While the descriptions and people are interesting, the reader is left wondering why Booth felt it necessary to reenact the journey of someone he spends so much time sneering at. The second and third sections of the book are much stronger. "Saigo's Last March" interweaves Booth's thorough knowledge of the general's history with a journey that sometimes daunts even the veteran walker. Here, and in the final section, "Looking for the Lost," Booth finds more signs of the Japan of his dreams.
This was Alan Booth's last book, published posthumously in 1994, the year after his death.
Journey through JapanReview Date: 2003-03-29
The most brilliant thing about this book is that the author combines Japanese history into his narratives as he traces three historical figures and/or locations in Japan by foot. The way he makes the characteres he meets along the way of his journey come to life is outstanding. I really enjoy this book and wish that he had written others before he died. The only thing that bothered me somewhat and makes me feel unsympathetic towards him, however, is that he drank too much. But who am I to judge? This is a great book. Highly recommended.
One of the bestReview Date: 2006-06-19
Highly Recommended
Journey to Japan with Alan!Review Date: 2005-08-23
Entertaining, informative, poignant.Review Date: 2005-05-11
He describes three different walks, each with a distinctive theme. The first follows the trail of Japanese novelist Osamu Dazai's 1944 tour of his home region, Tsugaru, in Northern Honshu. The second follows the path of General Takamori Saigo's retreat from the Battle of Enodake, in Kyushu, which ended the Satsuma rebellion in 1877. The third follows the possible track over central Honshu of the remnents of the Heike clan after their defeat at the Battle of Dannoura in 1186.
Along the way, between descriptions of his blisters and complaints about the weather, he weaves bits of history in with reflections on literature and drama, Japanese society, his own life, and the merits of various alcoholic beverages. He enjoys the Japanese, but doesn't necessarily like them, pokes fun at them constantly. Not that the Japanese, like any other nationality, don't deserve having fun poked at them. But one sometimes wonders why Booth spent so many years living in a country and learning the language of a people for whom he seems to have had so little respect. He acknowledges this indirectly even in the title of the book, "Looking for the Lost", which implies that he is looking for a Japan that may never have existed.
His comments on the Noh are interesting, but perplexing. He was a trained actor, went to Japan to learn about the Noh, and became disillusioned with it very quickly. From the little I have read and seen of Noh drama, it is based on quite different assumptions from European, especially Shakespearean, drama. It was "pickled" from the very beginning, an esoteric art form invented for the nobility, nothing "popular" or "alive" about it. Booth seems to have taken that difference personally, as if the Japanese had played a trick on him, rather than seeing the Noh for the quite unusual dramatic form that it is.
His announcement at the end of the book that he has colon cancer is terse and matter of fact, in some ways like Dazai's attitude toward suicide. One thinks of him writing this book with death looking over his shoulder, which perhaps explains the bittersweet feeling one gets while reading it.
Related works:
Basho - "The Narrow Road to the Deep North"
Isabella Bird - "Unbeatan Tracks in Japan"
Ezra Pound and Ernest Fenellosa - "The Classic Noh Theatre of
Japan"
Mishima Yukio - "Five Modern Noh Plays"
These are not nearly as much fun to read as Alan Booth.
Highly recommended.

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Lotus seedReview Date: 2006-11-05
This book is awsomeReview Date: 2006-06-21
The Lotus SeedReview Date: 2006-05-23
A wonderful bookReview Date: 2007-09-12
This is one book that I'll keep for many, many years even when I retire from teaching.
Symbol of a Lotus SeedReview Date: 2006-05-23
This is definitely one of the best children's book I have ever read. The images are beautifully drawn as they describe Vietnam and the story. The symbolism of the lotus seed reminds me of my culture and I should never forget it. I really like how the author added a Vietnamese poem at the back. A must read for all young and old!

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Mobile Guerilla Force - Another great story from Vietnam (3rd Amazon review)Review Date: 2007-12-12
A Real JungleReview Date: 2007-09-12
Great BookReview Date: 2006-10-28
Great honest first-hand accountReview Date: 2006-04-11
I like the style of his writing in all 3 books; the first-person style moves fast and leaves the reader breathless. These are very hard to put down once you start. Mr Donahue gives only sparse background information and jumps right into the action. Mr Donahue makes you feel as if you are looking at everything right through his eyes.
If you have military experience (especially combat arms), you will truly enjoy this book, as well as Mr Donahue's others. The sounds, smells, stresses and fatigue will all come flooding back through his writing. If you are not familiar with military culture, terminology or methodology, you might struggle a little bit BUT there is a glossary in the back of the book.
I highly recommend ALL of Mr Donahue's publications; they give a good overall perspective of what was done right and what was done wrong in this war, and are great examples of how good of a job our fighting men & women did in Vietnam (contrary to what mainstream media & film try to portray).
Very good book about jungle combatReview Date: 2003-10-07
Related Subjects: Pakistan Thailand China Japan Indonesia South Korea Taiwan India North Korea Malaysia Bangladesh Singapore
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