"This is less a travel book then a book of portraits, a sort of Asiatic album - some of the pictures etched in acid, and many of them brilliant. It is the kind of book the traveller ought to read before he or she visits Burma, Thailand, the Phillippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea or Japan. It encapsulates the political and cultural moods of these countries, it contains a section of potted recent history, it is at times very colourful and it is frequently funny. Ian Buruma pays a visit to there Marcoses in Honolulu - an illuminating visit - and at the end of it Imelda, the selfish pudgy billionaire, whimpers to the departing journalist: 'Please be kind to us poor little people. We have nothing left." From a review by Paul Theroux in the Far Eastern Economic Review quoted on the back cover of the 1989 Vintage paperback edition.
Considering that in the 21st century the sons of both Cory Aquino and Ferdinand Marcos have become president of the Phillippines makes this forty year old book even more worth reading particularly if the names of Aquino and Marcos mean nothing. Why should they mean anything for anyone under sixty? But for those of us who do remember it recalls days when "Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, but to be young was very heaven!" (William Wordsworth, The Prelude). That it all went sour so fast made one of life's sad but essential kicks-in-the-ass that you learn from.
But the book is more:
"How can a country modernise without losing its identity? What happens when indigenous culture breaks down and modernity comes from the outside, as is the case in Asia? Ian Buruma, a former journalist with the Far Eastern Economic Review, and a well-known commentator on Asia, travelled around eight Asian countries to discover if hamburgers and rock music make Thais less Thai, or Japanese less Japanese. Beginning in Burma, where the "outside" has been excluded, and ending in Japan, where Hiroshima has become a mirror of the US, Buruma's perceptive commentary on the complexities of modern-day Asia is interspersed with fascinating interviews (with people from all areas of life), news stories, the historical and political background, stories, extracts from plays and anecdotes. A stylish, informative, entertaining read for anyone who wants to understand the Asia behind the headlines." From a review in The Irish Times when this book was reissued in 2001.
Of course time has moved on, but the roots of these countries today can be found in Buruma's book. He is an excellent and perceptive writer who is always worth reading.