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Biography - Japanese books

Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Sue Sumii. By University of Michigan, Center for Japanese S. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $78.95. There are some available for $20.00.
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No comments about My Life: Living, Loving, and Fighting (Michigan Papers in Japanese Studies, No. 26).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by CS Lewis. By . There are some available for $56.41.
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No comments about Surprised By Joy - CS Lewis Autobiography (until CHIKU Paperback) Japanese Language Book.




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by T. Katai and Kenneth G. Henshall. By Brill Academic Publishers. The regular list price is $126.00. Sells new for $77.95. There are some available for $103.14.
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No comments about Literary Life in Tokyo, 1885-1915: Tayama Katai's Memoirs (Thirty Years in Tokyo).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Norman Smith. By UBC Press. The regular list price is $93.95. Sells new for $77.50. There are some available for $103.91.
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No comments about Resisting Manchukuo: Chinese Women Writers and the Japanese Occupation (Contemporary Chinese Studies).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by John Adlard. By Edwin Mellen Press. Sells new for $79.95.
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No comments about A Biography of Arthur Diosy: Founder of the Japan Society : Home to Japan (Japanese Studies).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Marjorie Irish Randell. By Trafford Publishing. The regular list price is $9.99. Sells new for $7.99.
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5 comments about Searching For Friday\'s Child.

  1. Howard "Jack" Irish was born to Michigan farm life. His family was close, his friends were true. He was a 4H lad, strong and faithful. He went to college, joined the ROTC and was drafted after he graduated in May of 1941. He was commissioned a lieutenant after training and sent to the Philippines. The Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in December and all of a sudden Jack's sweet duty in the tropics evaporated like steam on hot pavement.

    Jack saw action on Corrigador before he was captured by the Japanese. He endured life as a POW as well as anybody could, but sadly he lost his life in September of 1944, while being transported along with 749 other prisoners of war on the Japanese freighter Shinyo Maru. The Shinyo Maru was torpedoed by the USS Paddle. The sub's commander had no way of knowing the POWs were on board.

    It all happened so long ago, but Marjorie makes it seem like only yesterday, so timeless is her writing. Jack was her brother and she lovingly tells this story through the numerous letters written by Jack to his family and friends before the war, the all to brief correspondence between Jack and his family after his family discovers he has been taken prisoner and the volume of letters between Jack's mother and different officials as she relentlessly sought to find out what happened to her son.

    This book is so well crafted that at times it seemed as if I was reading a novel as I read the night away. I should have read the book long ago and I'm ashamed to say that that I did not, for you see, Marjorie's Uncle Ray was my grandfather. So many of the characters in her book have passed away, as has my father, Jack's cousin, who fortunately survived the war. Soon all the people from that time will have passed this mortal coil, but thanks to people like Marjorie Randall, who can tell a story without making it seem like dry history, there will be those of us left behind who remember.

    Reviewed by Vesta Irene


  2. I just finished reading Searching for Friday's Child for the second time. Each time I couldn't put it down until I finished.
    Searching for Friday's Child is more than a portrait of an intelligent sensitive young man, it is a book about warm human relationships. Although Jack, a prisoner of war being transported from one Philippine Island to another or perhaps to Japan by the Japanese aboard the Shinyu Maru, died in his early twenties (a result of the torpedoing of the Shinyu Maru by an American submarine toward the end of Second World War), he lives in this book! It is clear from his letters to his family, his girlfriend and to his friends that we all lost a person who had much to offer to those he loved and cared about and to society.
    Jack's words, through his letters, show us that he had a gift for writing and storytelling, as does the author, his younger sister. Searching for Friday's Child tells us of the author's emotional journey to find her brother, to discover things about him she hadn't known before, on an intimate level that I haven't found in any other memoir, autobiography or biography about the courageous soldiers of World War II. I highly recommend this book.
    Nancy Sampson, Woodbridge, VA


  3. I read this book in the past few days, only days after the beginning of America's 3/03 war with Iraq, which may be a partial explanation of why I found "Searching for Friday's Child" such a compelling read.

    The book begins with the author's recollection of growing up on a Michigan farm, with her parents, and her brother, "Jack", four years her senior. We are then provided with copies of her brother's letters to home, and to his girlfriend, while he attends Michigan State College, when he is called into the Army Air Corps, from bootcamp, then when he is sent to the Philippines only months prior to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941 and Japan's simultaneous attack on the Philippines.

    As of 12/7/41, the letters from Jack stop, and we are treated with reply letters to Jack's family from U.S. military, the Red Cross, etc., as the family is desparately trying to find out what's happened to Jack, with the advent of the US/Japanese war. Subsequently, the family learns Jack is a POW in the Philippines, but they cannot find out how he is, whether he is alive, healthy, or been a victim of the myriad of attrocities committed by the Japanese solders in the Philippines upon our servicemen, as well as the Filipinos.

    Jack's family is advised of the POW camp within which Jack is held, and advised they should continue to write Jack as he may receive their letters. They do continue to write, but have no way of ascertaining if Jack is receiving any of their letters. After several months, they receive the first of about four "postcards" from Jack, from the POW camp, but these tell little of Jack, as little can be said due to censorship by his captors.

    Ultimately, the family is informed that Jack was aboard a Japanese ship, one of 750 POWs being transported in September 1944 by the Japanese to another island, or perhaps Japan, that on September 7, 1944, that ship is torpedoed by the US during which 83 POW's swim to shore and are rescued by Filipinos, and ultimately returned to the US. Unfortunately, Jack was not one of the lucky ones. Thereafter, he is listed as Missing In Action(MIA), and again the family has no way of knowing if Jack is alive or dead, whether he drowned, was shot by the Japanese, who were murdering all visible POWs after the torpedo struck, or whether he somehow survived.

    We are then treated to many letters from several surviving POWs, some who knew Jack, were his friends at the POW camp.

    This is a wonderful historical account of a family's desparate, yet compassionate, attempts to try to find out about Jack's well-being, his life during those years, anything to fill the gaps. It begins primarily with the efforts of Jack's mother, but is continued with those of the author, his younger sister, efforts which continued all the way up the late 1990's, over fifty years after WWII.

    We are treated to the insights of several POW's, their own accounts of life in a Japanese POW camp, their accounts of life with Jack, Jack's excellent accomplishments in the Army Air Corps, his unique skills with operating anti-aircraft artillery, his command's success is shooting down 15 Japanese aircraft, which as I recall, was a record during the war.

    By the time one completes Searching for Friday's Child, one feels one knows Jack Irish, his mother, father, and certainly his sister, the author, she who joined the U.S. Marines Reserves during WWII. One is certainly treated to a wonderful account of a close-knit family's quest during unimaginable times of the tragedies of war.

    This is a wonderful read. I highly recommend it.

    Regards,

    Frank Rankin
    Sacramento, CA



  4. Marjorie Randell's recollection of her life growing up in a close-knit family on a Michigan farm, and her subsequent heartbreak of losing her brother and the search for meaning in his death is both sentimental and memorable. She captures the innocence of the mid-West that was torn apart as her brother, and other small town boys, were thrust into the horrors of war. The story shifts with her brothers letters - both from his service days, and then more harrowing,when he was a POW. Through his letters, we see a boy turn into a man, and at age 23, we see how his death aboard a Japanese war ship at the hands of American bombers brought agony and questions to a family back home. Sweet recollections of an innocent time lost, and the loyalty of a sister that looks for answers, even 60 years later.


  5. Marjorie Randell's recollection of her life growing up in a close-knit family on a Michigan farm, and her subsequent heartbreak of losing her brother and the search for meaning in his death is both sentimental and memorable. She captures the innocence of the mid-West that was torn apart as her brother, and other small town boys, were thrust into the horrors of war. The story shifts with her brothers letters - both from his service days, and then more harrowing,when he was a POW. Through his letters, we see a boy turn into a man, and at age 23, we see how his death aboard a Japanese war ship at the hands of American bombers brought agony and questions to a family back home. Sweet recollections of an innocent time lost, and the loyalty of a sister that looks for answers, even 60 years later.


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Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Yuri Kochiyama. By Community Documentation Workshop at St. Mark's Church-in-the-Bowery. There are some available for $99.77.
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No comments about Fishmerchant's daughter: An oral history.




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Denis Gavin. By Lennard Publishing. There are some available for $3.74.
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No comments about Quiet Jungle Angry Sea: My Escapes from the Japanese.




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Lucian Swift Kirtland. By Kessinger Publishing, LLC. The regular list price is $30.95. Sells new for $20.08. There are some available for $21.75.
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No comments about Samurai Trails: A Chronicle Of Wanderings On The Japanese High Road (1918).




Posted in Biography (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Hiroshi Tanaka. By Univ of Pennsylvania Pr. The regular list price is $18.95. Sells new for $6.22. There are some available for $4.92.
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No comments about The Human Side of Japanese Enterprise.




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Last updated: Sun Sep 7 13:47:33 EDT 2008