A Kirkus Reviews Best Nonfiction Book of the Year
Eri Hotta, born in Tokyo and educated in Japan, the U.S., and the U.K., has taught at Oxford, in Tokyo, and in Jerusalem, specializing in international relations.
“Hotta illuminates the extraordinary ideological and military
predicament in which Japan found itself in the months before
the attack on Pearl Harbor…[She] brings to life the key figures of
a deeply divided Japanese leadership…[and] scrupulously details
[their] negotiations and squabbles…against a backdrop of dauntingly
complex domestic and international maneuverings.”
—The New Yorker
“Outstanding...In lucid prose, Hotta...persuasively sketches the
very distinct personalities shaping the decisions that drove Japan
toward war….She makes it clear that there are two versions of the
Asia-Pacific War in China and Japan that hardly meet at all…[and]
concludes that after 1945, Japan’s actual ‘past, with its
improbable story of how the war came to pass, became another
country.’ It is a country that policymakers in Tokyo, Beijing, and
Washington should seek to understand, not least through this humane
and fair-minded book.”
—Rana Mitter, The New York Review of Books
"Chilling…Constitutes a warning of the literally earth-shattering
dangers that can emerge when the political system of a powerful
nation fails to work."
—The New York Times Book Review
“Hotta’s groundbreaking work is both a fascinating history and a
cautionary tale for those who wield power today.”
—The Dallas Morning News
“[Hotta’s] account is a warning to any country that would talk
itself into a foolish war.”
—The Seattle Times
“In this focused, informed and persuasive book…Hotta effortlessly
returns us to the moment just before the dice were so disastrously
rolled. From a perspective little known to Americans, a masterful
account of how and why World War II began.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“A fascinating read for anyone interested in Japan’s involvement in
World War II…While scholarly and thoroughly researched, it’s also a
highly enjoyable read…A real page turner.”
—Library Journal
“In this fast-moving, persuasive account of Japan's road to Pearl
Harbor, Eri Hotta describes the pathetic leadership of a country
who argue among themselves endlessly when the crisis across the
Pacific requires decisive action to preserve the peace. It is a
story of self-delusion, irresponsibility, and ignorance from which
Japan is not entirely free even today.”
—Akira Iriye, author of Pearl Harbor and the
Coming of the Pacific War
“This ambitious, groundbreaking history builds new layers atop a
story that we thought we knew.”
—Everyday eBook
“Finely nuanced…[Hotta] forcefully reframes how we should
consider the Japanese with respect to their positions as emerging
world powers in [an]…era of international turmoil.
—Asian American Literature Fans
“Riveting…This important book should be in every major library. It
will interest anyone attempting to make sense of Pearl Harbor, the
Pacific War, or bureaucratic dysfunction and its possibly tragic
consequences.”
—Choice
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