Asia Books
Related Subjects: Japan
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Used price: $6.99

Enchanting Review: Sisters Of The SwordReview Date: 2008-08-05
greatReview Date: 2008-08-06
first off i have to say that i'm somewhat impressed. this is a story about two young girls dealing with the death of their father and brothers, and there is actually evidence of violence. it is a children's book so of course there is nothing too graphic, but it is no max and ruby! you fear for the characters and the suspense your fear creates because they could actually get hurt really increases the anticipation. the story makes you want to feel things basically :P but again, this is a novel for children. i picked it up in the 9 - 12 section of the book store and i'd say the subject matter is handled in a way appropriate for that age. more often than not, though danger is close at hand, the girls are spared what would be a scary scene (and what would have been added in the adult version of the novel with more gore and blood) leaving only a handful of actual encounters wherein they are confronted with an unpleasant confrontation.
the main characters kimi and hana were great as well. the story wasn't so much about how they 'beat the system', how they showed everyone that girls can do whatever boys can. it was a better story, side stepping that superficial attempt at feminism. it was about inner strength and fighting your own demons with what you've got. and yes kimi wants to be a samurai like nothing else, but the focus of the story is on how she reacts with strength and courage when such a bad thing has happened to her and her family. she uses her desire to become a samurai to move forward, to avenge her family, but her reason of existence isn't to prove that she can. she knows she can. her purpose is acknowledge her ability, nurture it, and then use it to best accomplish what she desires.
the book ended... like a beginning, so i assume this is the beginning of some sort of series. and this is a novel written for children, but that i'm 20 yr old university student and still enjoyed it says something, i think, about the author's talent for storytelling. it was a well written book with a good story and great characters. i look forward to a continuation.
A straight forward captivating book with a compelling heroineReview Date: 2008-07-09
Courtesy of Teens Read TooReview Date: 2008-06-13
Unfortunately, disaster strikes in the form of Kimi and Hana's uncle, Hidehiro. Their father's younger brother, annoyed at their father's growing power, plots to kill their father and wipe out their branch of the family so that he can rule. Kimi, Hana, their mother, and younger brother manage to escape, but their older brothers and their father are brutally slaughtered by Hidehiro.
Separated from their mother and brother, Kimi and Hana disguise themselves as boys and present themselves to a local dojo, where they are taken on as servants by the wise Sensei Goku, who promises to teach them further fighting skills if they comport themselves well. While at the dojo they meet with a boy of peasant background, Tatsuya, who is ridiculed for his low status since most of those training under Goku are nobles. Kimi and Hana's cousin, Ken-ichi, plays the role of small-scale antagonist; although he does not realize his cousins are actually alive and right under his nose, he makes their life difficult.
Kimi and Hana must maintain their disguise while learning the skills of the samurai so they can face their uncle Hidehiro in combat and revenge their father's death once and for all.
I enjoyed the characters, and got a good picture of the relationship between the sisters. The secondary characters, such as Tatsuya and Goku, were well-drawn. An obvious deal of research went into recreating Japanese life in this time period, but the author presents this detail without confusing the reader. The conclusion of the book was satisfying, but leaves room for a sequel that I, for one, would be excited to see.
Reviewed by: Candace Cunard
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Excellent accounting and entertaining as wellReview Date: 2006-10-16
Funston's and America's Greatest Special Forces ActionReview Date: 2005-08-13
I wonder why there are not more books available on Funston. Be that as it may, this book does justice to Funston and his raid.
Review from the Washington PostReview Date: 2005-04-16
IN WHICH WAR was the term "Gook" invented? When did American soldiers conduct their first body count and pioneer the use of the "water cure" to persuade Asian guerrillas to betray their comrades?
After which battle did a young rifleman write home to the folks in Kingston, New York, "I am in my glory when I can sight my gun on some dark skin and pull the trigger"?
Modern as it all sounds, the answer is not Vietnam, or even Korea or World War II. The American conquest of the Philippines barely rates a mention in school history books, usually as a cryptic footnote to the short war which President William McKinley and publisher William Randolph Hearst waged on Spain in 1898 for the independence of Cuba and the circulation of Hearst's newspapers. Yet 126,458 Americans fought in the Philippines between 1898 and 1902, of whom 4,234 died, while 16,000 Filipinos died in battle and another 200,000 in "reconcentration camp." There were in addition massacres of civilians in reprisal for guerrilla attacks and similar sideshows all too familiar in subsequent Asian wars.
The story of how, and why America liberated the Philippines from Spain and then took the islands back from their inhabitants two weeks later is a complicated one, already well told in one of the classics of American historiography, Leon Wolff's Little Brown Brother, published in 1960. But the writing of history is never finished, and David Haward Bain has managed another fine book on the subject, not disagreeing with Wolff's conclusions, but making them fresh and vivid for a generation which has seen yet another Asian war.
This is not, however, simply another tale of savagery in the rice paddies. Almost as if he could read tomorrow's newspapers, Bain has brought his account up to the minute, with perceptive entries, for instance, indexed under Aquino Benigno and Ver, General Fabian (the latter currently on trial for complicity in the former's assassination). This energetic young historian has thus pulled off that rarest of publishing coups, a scholarly historical work of bang-on topicality. He has, what's more, found a most original way of bringing his story to life.
From this distance, and even at the time, the American conquest of the Philippines has always been difficult to fathom. But, then and now, two figures jump forth from a cast of thousands: Emilio Aguinaldo, not quite 30, brave and passionately patriotic, the president of the republic of the Philippines proclaimed as the beaten Spaniards departed (and the first republic in Asia) and Colonel Frederick Funston, six years older, who drove the last nail into the republic's coffin by capturing Aguinaldo on March 23, 1901, after a long and daring hunt through the jungles and mountains of northern Luzon.
Aguinaldo, who looked remarkably like his current successor, Ferdinand Marcos, survived his capture and lived a long life, long enough to welcome the arrival of the Japanese in 1942 (understandably, perhaps; the new invaders also promised liberation), to march in the Manila independence parade of 1946, carrying the flag he first raised against Spain in 1896, and to see a new American war just getting under way in Asia in 1964, the year of his death. A largely forgotten figure now, even in the Philippines, Aguinaldo emerges from Bain's book an authentic hero and his republic a tragically missed chance for the United States to have been the protector of Asia's first genuine democracy.
His captor, the adventurous son of a Kansas politician known as "Foghorn Funston, the farmers' friend" was plainly just as archetypal a figure. "I am afraid that some people at home will lie awake nights worrying about the ethics of this war, thinking that our enemy is fighting for the right of self-government" he told a New York Times correspondent. "The word independent, which these people roll over their tongues so glibly, is to them a word, and not much more . . . . they are, as a rule, an illiterate, semisavage people, who are waging war, not against tyranny, but against Anglo-Saxon order and decency." Funston's feat, a mixture of reckless daring and ingenious double-cross, or what used to be known in Vietnam as a "John Wayne stunt," was the stuff of movies, and would have made a splendid vehicle for James Cagney (Funston was 5 feet 4 inches tall and touchy about it) if Hollywood had blossomed before American imperialism went out of fashion.
BUT, LIKE MANY a veteran from the East, Funston could not settle down to life back home, took to the bottle and died at 51 in 1917, when he was being seriously considered for command of the American Expeditionary Force that went to France that year. But for his heart attack, in fact, we would very likely now be debating the merits of the Funston rocket instead of the one named for his deputy, General John Pershing, who got the job instead.
Here, unmistakably, we have the Green Beret, or cowboy turned romantic military stuntman. In fact, Funston's boss, General Arthur MacArthur, father of the even more famous Douglas, was an old Indian fighter, and so were many of his buddies in the 20th Kansas infantry he led to the Philippines. The fact that the Far East is West of the Wild West has profoundly shaped America's wars there, a point made in the insightful and absurd movie The Deer Hunter.
It is hard to quarrel with Bain's conclusion that the years of American rule did little or nothing to solve the basic political problem of the Philippines. After three centuries of Spanish colonial government, the islands had none of the institutions of self-rule and no experience of it. All the new rulers achieved was a superficial Americanization of the illustrades, the Hispanicized native upper class, leaving the masses in pious poverty and the way open for a native-born dictatorship to follow the authoritarian rule of slippery Spaniards and decent Anglo-Saxons. People learn self-government by governing themselves and making their own mistakes, and America put off the Philippines' fateful day for 50 years, failing, in the end, even to supply the military protection that is the only justification for empire.
But Americans are still well thought of in the Philippines, as Bain and a group of friends, including his photographer-brother Christopher, discovered when they repeated Funston's epic trek through the Luzon jungle in 1982, talking to the same locals, fording the same streams, and being bitten by descendants of the same mosquitoes which bit the pint-sized adventurer and his party 80 years earlier. Melding past and present, and interweaving the historical background with present politics brings vividly home the long shadows still cast by America's first adventure in Asia. This is an important story, honestly researched and well told -- a second classic, in fact, on a fascinating subject.
sitting in darkness helped me see the lightReview Date: 2000-06-26

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Excellent book for any history/military readerReview Date: 2008-09-08
The Son Tay RaidReview Date: 2008-02-18
A "must read" for Spec Ops warriorsReview Date: 2007-12-16
And Max says this is "definitely a book you want to read and have in your library."
Enough said!!
Definitely buy the book if you have any interest in reading about the mission and the special ops graybeards who participated in this Vietnam-era POW rescue attempt led by MC-130 Combat Talon aircraft. Until much of the information was declassified, you had to go inside the battalion/wing/squadron vault to read the after action report and lessons learned reports. But even those documents don't come close to providing the insight author John Gargus gives the reader through the eyes of a participant...planner and lead navigator for the strike force. But the book goes much further than that. Gargus is a meticulous researcher who also conducted dozens of interviews with other participants to capture the totality of this one-of-a-kind mission in special ops annals.
Thanks John, you got it "right."
Outstanding Tale of Heroism!Review Date: 2007-10-30
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This is OfficialReview Date: 2006-12-28
a great book on a great happening in military historyReview Date: 1999-04-14
Please Print this book again!Review Date: 2001-05-01
Anyone who had a relative in the Korean War can follow what their loved one went through by reading this book.
a great book on a great happening in military historyReview Date: 1999-04-14

Used price: $30.11

Special book of Special menReview Date: 2008-08-29
The Us Special Forces. The finest of the finest.
It was great to get the re print, since the original had been sold out and hard to get for some time already. I know soldiers of the Special Forces, of that era and in the book were few pics of Finns who had moved to The USA after WWII and joined in The US Military and Special Forces and SOG.
Absolutely a great book to get. With John Plaster, Frank Greco, John Stryker-Meyer books and many others ofcourse , your homelibrary will be complete.
A weighty, essential guide for any serious military libraryReview Date: 2008-08-18
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
This book is a MUST HAVE for your Special Forces collection!Review Date: 2006-04-06
This book is a great reference that is invaluable to anyone remotely interested in the Special forces. The maps in the back are superb as well, and great overhead pics of base camps including part/full layouts!! No other book on the Green Berets can even touch the sheer magnitude and scale this book covers. A true prize for any collector - Running Recon (Greco) and SOG A Photo History (Plaster) are really the only illustrated books that have as great of a scale. In many respects this book stands alone - If I could give this book a 6/5 I would - actually I would give it an infinite - If you are into the Vietnam Green Berets or really any Special Forces from any era - BUY THIS BOOK NOW NO MATTER THE PRICE!
An outstanding compendium of the SF in Southeast AsiaReview Date: 1997-01-21

Used price: $0.01

Accurate and VERY readableReview Date: 1998-04-07
Wonderful bookReview Date: 2001-02-26
Wonderful book.Review Date: 2001-02-26
EXCELLENT! Reads like a good novel.Review Date: 1998-04-12

a must have!Review Date: 2008-06-16
its easy to read, small and compact enough to bring along and has tons of great info.
HIGHLY RECOMMEDED!
Why not always pack it with you for distant placesReview Date: 2005-05-16
Going to a third world country? This book is for you!Review Date: 2000-06-12
The best "carry with you" travel health book out there.Review Date: 2001-11-28

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A Visual TreasureReview Date: 2005-04-24
Wonderful book!Review Date: 2005-04-04
Loved it!
Beautiful Artistic Photographs to a wonderful storyReview Date: 2005-04-01
I would highly recommend giving this beautiful book to family, friends and clients.
...the camera is a delicate paintbrush...Review Date: 1999-03-06
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Collectible price: $28.50

Jewish Shanghai and MoreReview Date: 2008-04-08
Krasno was born in Shanghai in 1923 to stateless Russian Jewish parents. Krasno lived there her entire life until expats were forced out of China in 1945. The author includes detailed, yet concise, background information--including newspaper articles and some Japanese propaganda pieces--about issues that affected her daily life during this era and her reactions to the world around her. She tries to puzzle out the truth behind the propaganda and figure out what is the real status of the war, for example. She also attempts to illustrate how the lives of the various groups of people in Shanghai intersected and how the ways in which people interacted changed.
Although the book focuses on the war years of 1942 to 1945, she provides other interesting information as well. One of the worthwhile tangents Krasno provides is the story of her parents' emigration. Her father, David Rabinovich, left Russian for Siberia, and then went on to Harbin. As the Russian Jews picked up their lives again in Harbin, they began to suffer hardships at the hands of White Russian Fascists and the Japanese. Eventually, Rabinovich and many other Jews left Harbin to try their luck in the more tolerant city of Shanghai. There, Rabinovich met and married his wife and became the editor of a Russian Jewish newspaper called Our Life. He also served as the honorary secretary of the Shanghai Ashkenazi Jewish community. Krasno's mother owned a children's dress and toy shop called Peter Pan. Luckily, during Ghettoization this little shop kept the family fed. One of the fun anecdotes about the store involves writer and personality Emily Hahn, who shopped there for clothing for her pet gibbon.
Other notable side stories include the history of the Opium trade, the background of the Bund, and the story of Jewish immigrant Silas Hardoon and his impact on the city.
Although the book deals with a difficult time in Shanghai's history, Krasno's account maintains a lighthearted, youthful exuberance. Despite the air raid sirens and bombs going off around her, food shortages, and other hardships of wartime, young Rena remains determined to pursue her education and insists on having as much fun as is humanly possible under these unusual conditions. Fortunately, she wrote down all of these elements of her life in Shanghai for us to contemplate in the 21st Century.
Strangers Always is a quick and satisfying read. I found it better than some of the other war time memoirs for its style, tone, and level of details. The book will appeal, of course, to readers interested in the history of Jews in Shanghai, but also to readers interested in WWII era Shanghai or immigrant life during the boom years in general.
Eye-witness account of the end of imperialism in Shanghai.Review Date: 1997-07-21
different view of the second world warReview Date: 2003-04-19
different view of the second world warReview Date: 2003-04-19

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Tai Chi the Technique of PowerReview Date: 2007-12-17
One of the best books available on the subject for westernerReview Date: 1999-03-29
TRULY POWERFULReview Date: 2003-07-09
Really great!Review Date: 2006-01-23
...and besides, it's cheap...
Related Subjects: Japan
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MAYA SNOW
Historical Middle Grade
Hardcover - Available Now
Rating: 4 Enchantments
Kimi is the daughter of one of the best Jitos that feudal Japan has seen in a long time. While she is well practiced in many of what we would call "womanly" arts, she yearns to be a samurai warrior. Her father believes that girls should be able to protect themselves so he has been training Kimi, and her sister Hanna, in the samurai arts since they were little and they both have a lot of potential. Even though it is known that girls don't become samurais Kimi is determined to find a way.
Kimi never imagined her chance to become samurai would come so soon. But then her uncle murders her father and brothers right in front of her eyes. Kimi and Hanna narrowly escape, but are left alone. With their father and brothers dead and their mother and younger brother gone into hiding, Kimi and Hanna have no where to go. Determined to seek their revenge on their uncle the girls know that they must train under the best and so when they arrive at Master Goku's dojo, or training school, they know they've found the right place. Dressed up as boys, Hanna and Kimi attempt to seek a spot in the school, but all the spots are taken. While all the spots are taken for students the girls do manage to get spots as servants. While most of their days are spent cleaning and cooking they do manage to get in a few classes and start their training to become samurais. Swept up in a whirlwind adventure filled with samurai codes, swords and self-discovery, the girls' lives will never be the same again.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The author did a great job creating not only the main characters, but also the supporting characters. I was definitely able to sense the bond the sisters shared, which made this book very unique. It was interesting to see the sisters grow through each other. They helped each through the worst of times and held each other up when in need. It was also very refreshing that the girls were determined to fight. They didn't cower behind someone else and let them fight, they stood up for themselves and were determined to restore honor to their family - which I thought was such a great girl power message!! The supporting characters were also exceptionally put together. I felt like they played a big role in the book and just as developed as the main characters. It was also very evident that a lot of research went into recreating thirteenth century Japan. The author organized this information in a way which wasn't confusing and I was actually able to learn a few fun facts. While it took a couple of chapters to get into the book I was able to fully immerse myself and found I was caught up in the adventures of the girls. I am very much hoping for a sequel (the ending left a few unanswered questions) as I really enjoyed this book.
This is Maya Snow's first novel, but I definitely hope it won't be her last! You can find out more information about her at
http://www.harpercollins.com/authors/33325/Maya_Snow/index.aspx
Tasha S.
ENCHANTING REVIEWS
July 2008