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Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I Survived China’s Wartime Atrocity
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Over 150,000 innocents died of starvation in Changchun, northeastern China, after the end of WW2 when Mao's army laid siege during the Chinese Civil War. Japanese girl Homare Endo, then age seven, was trapped in Changchun with her family. After nomadic flight from city to city, Homare eventually returned to Japan and a professional career. This is her eyewitness, at times
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Paperback, 304 pages
Published
October 25th 2016
by Stone Bridge Press
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Start your review of Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I Survived China’s Wartime Atrocity
Feb 10, 2020
Horace Derwent
marked it as to-read
“……記得那時長春城裡的狗特別肥,都是吃了死人肉的……”
While Endo's writing style can be a bit flowery and overwhelming, the suffering chronicled in this book stupefied me. And I've read plenty about suffering. This book is not only fascinating, it is one of the most disturbing things I have ever read.
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It is often said that war is hell, but the same can be said of the postwar experiences of many. During wars people have been displaced, cities destroyed, there were shortages of food and medicine. And the losers are often at the mercy of the victors. Homare Endo’s experiences as vanquished Japanese in China are recorded in Stonebridge Press’s English version of Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I survived China’s Wartime Atrocity (2016) translated by Michael Brase.
Homare and her famil ...more
Homare and her famil ...more
The outcome of China's civil war was determined in Manchuria, the Northeastern "rooster's head" portion of China bordering the Soviet Union and Korea. It was Jiang Jieshi's disastrous decision to confront Mao there, where Mao could be easily supplied by the Soviet Union, that led to his defeat and the communist takeover of China.
At the time of civil war, Manchuria had been a colony of Japan (ostensibly a separate country by the name of Manzhouguo) for several decades and had only just been retur ...more
At the time of civil war, Manchuria had been a colony of Japan (ostensibly a separate country by the name of Manzhouguo) for several decades and had only just been retur ...more
ARC courtesy of the publisher via the Amazon Vine program.
I am embarrassed at how long it took me to finish reading this book. I’ve read so many memoirs and biographies of the tragedies of wartime that I was gobsmacked by physically being unable to read more than a bit at a time of this book.
Thinking about it, there are only two other volumes about the cruelties of war that had that kind of visceral impact. One was a recounting of how Nazis were allowed to hide in plain sight without atoning fo ...more
I am embarrassed at how long it took me to finish reading this book. I’ve read so many memoirs and biographies of the tragedies of wartime that I was gobsmacked by physically being unable to read more than a bit at a time of this book.
Thinking about it, there are only two other volumes about the cruelties of war that had that kind of visceral impact. One was a recounting of how Nazis were allowed to hide in plain sight without atoning fo ...more
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