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The history of the Japanese royal family may theoretically span back more centuries than I could probably count but their modern history, and where the Seaburgs begin their coverage, starts following the fall of the Shoguns in the nineteenth century. While Yamato Dynasty covers the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, most of its pages focus on the period leading up to World War II, and the surprisingly significant role Emperor Hirohito and the Japanese Royal Family played in the militarisation of Japan and the road to World War II.

The Seaburgs cover how Hirohito could be so central in developing the imperial Japanese war machine and yet come out of World War II with his crown intact when so many other royals lost theirs.½
 
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MiaCulpa | Feb 1, 2021 |
After World War I, bush pilots, taking advantage of the glut of surplus warplanes and service-trained pilots, flew over unmapped terrain without radios or weather reports. They were tough and independent . . . and a lifeline to the outside for miners, trappers, missionaries, and others far from civilization. They flew in the Outback, in New Guinea; they flew north to the frozen wilderness, south to Latin America. And during World War II at bases in places such as Nome, Alaska, they were the only fliers skilled enough to land when the ceiling was less than two hundred feet and the visibility was less than a quarter of a mile.

Here are the stories of aviators such as Harold Gillam, one of Alaska’s first bush pilots. Gillam and fellow bush pilot Ben Eielson were the first men to cross the Arctic Ocean by air. But the flying was treacherous, often claiming the pilots in a deadly crash. Nevertheless, these dedicated pilots persevered, driven by the needs of others and their own insatiable passion for flying.

Filled with photographs of the pilots and the planes, “The Bush Pilots,” part of The Epic of Flight series, tells the stories of these brave pilots and their daring exploits. Readers interested in the achievements of early aviators and the evolution of aviation will find much to appreciate here.

Recommended.
 
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jfe16 | Dec 17, 2020 |
Thoroughly researched, a real page-turner on a topic of great importance. Top notch!

The Soong family is a wonderful key hole through which to observe US-China relations from 1880 to 1950 or so. One Soong sister married Sun Yat-sen, one married Chiang Kai-shek. It's definitely a case of truth being stranger than fiction. Sun Yat-sen was a bumbler, Chiang Kai-shek was a schemer. Between the unplanned catastrophes and the planned catastrophes, how anybody survives seems almost a miracle.

The truly frightening part is how the behavior patterns in this book resemble our times these days. Politics and corruption are pretty much the same in all times and places. The gruesome details uncovered in this book would have been known by very few people on the actual scene. Ach, though I remember in the early 1980s when repression was alive and well in Taiwan. I remember a Taiwanese professor getting thrown off a balcony in Pittsburgh - the long arm of the KMT secret police. But how vast money flows into vast propaganda.... what goes on now, with the internet and social media.... this insanity is not just a thing of the past!
 
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kukulaj | 5 altre recensioni | Jan 30, 2020 |
Author Sterling Seagrave was an “investigative journalist” who grew up in Burma (before it was Myanmar). “Investigative journalist” puts my back up, as they always seem to be selling a story rather than actually investigating anything. In Dragon Lady, Seagrave is in fact selling a story, but the documentation he provides suggests the story is one I will buy.

Although the ostensible subject is Tzu Hsi, known in the West as the “Dowager Empress”, Seagrave’s story actually concerns the history of relations between China and the West in the 19th and early 20th century, mythbusting as he goes. His basic theme is the Western powers treated China with profound injustice; but the Chinese themselves (including the last rulers, the Qing Dynasty, who were Manchu and not ethnic Chinese) contributed by being hopelessly corrupt. The injustice theme gets off to a rousing start with Seagrave’s explication of the Opium Wars; I think everybody agrees these were one of the more sordid acts in Western history so no further “mythbusting” is necessary. Now that he’s got his stride, Seagrave continues with the Taiping Rebellion. Here my own myths get busted; my previous impression was the Taiping Rebellion was stopped by “Chinese” Gordon and his “Ever-Victorious Army”; however Seagrave argues that the “Ever-Victorious Army” was ineffectual and the rebellion was broken by the Chinese themselves.

Interspersed with these accounts, Seagrave follows the career of Tzu Hsi. Since actual documentation of her life is so scanty, Seagrave discusses general aspects of court life. This was extremely constrained and ritualized, with the imperial diet, activities, and sex life all subject to precise protocol. Tzu Hsi eventually becomes the “Dowager Empress” to her son, the Emperor Kuang Hsu. Keeping track of what’s going on gets very complicated; there are multiple factions – both Manchu and ethnic Chinese – in the Qing government; the most prominent was the “Ironhats”; conservative Manchu who wanted foreigners expelled. Eventually a popular anti-Christian and anti-foreign movement, the “Boxers”, arises, leading to the “Boxer Rebellion”.

Seagrave jumps on conventional wisdom about the Boxer rebellion with both feet. That story is generally that the Dowager Empress was an evil woman who controlled the Chinese government; that the Boxers were controlled by the Empress and sent to attack foreigners; that the various legations held out bravely against the Boxers and organized Chinese troops until help arrived. Seagrave sorts through what documentation is available and presents the following:

• Very few of the Western diplomats and news reporters in China spoke Chinese; therefore they were dependent on various informants, Western or Chinese, who did.
• The informants had interests of their own; ethnic Chinese wanted to overthrow the Manchu dynasty and Manchu wanted to strengthen their own positions and adjusted the information they gave westerners accordingly.
• One of the Chinese-speaking westerners, Edmund Backhouse, perpetrated fraud on a high level, claiming to have access to various Chinese sources, including the diary of a high Qing official. Backhouse also claimed to have had sexual affairs with many prominent men and women, both western and Chinese, and documented these in his memoirs; he was instrumental in convincing various contacts that the Empress was sort of an evil eminence; these contacts passed that appreciation on to their governments and newspapers.
• The events leading to the “Boxer Rebellion” were largely fomented by westerners. The rumor that a “rebellion” was in the offing reached the embassies long before anything actually happened; embassy personal were involved in some unprovoked shootings of Chinese under the pretext that they were “Boxers”. The actual siege of the legation quarter was undramatic; embassy personnel were never in any danger, the Chinese never made an organized attack, casualties were caused by stray bullets or ricochets, and the relief expedition was poorly managed.
• The Chinese military had the capability to take the legations, but the Chinese commanders involved were hedging their bets, trying to preserve relations with the west and preserve their military units for possible internecine conflict later.
• The Dowager Empress was never in control of anything; she was essentially a prisoner in the palace, under control of various ministerial factions in the Chinese government. Edicts and instructions supposedly issued by her actually came from her ministers.
• The western powers took advantage of the event (just as they had in the aftermath of the Opium Wars) to engage in large scale looting.
• Although most of the events that would qualify as “atrocities” were perpetrated on Chinese by the west, there was a wholesale slaughter of missionaries – including wives and children – in one Chinese province.

One of the results of the “rebellion” was western insistence on more access to the imperial government; as a result some western women – diplomat’s wives and daughters – met with the Dowager Empress and Emperor. They generally reported she was amiable and pleasant. They were denounced as “stupid” and “deceived” by those who had an interest in defaming the Empress Dowager.
Seagrave presents his case in a convincing fashion; he has access to a lot of documentation, both western and Chinese, backing his arguments. However, I’m always a little suspect of journalists writing histories, and there’s one little comment – in an endnote – that makes me uneasy. In discussing an abortive attempt to reform the Chinese government from the top down – the “Hundred Days”- Seagrave says the following:

“…after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson immediately rescinded most of Kennedy’s radical foreign policy initiatives, including moves to reach détente with Russia and Cuba and to withdraw all U.S. troops from Vietnam. There are many interesting parallels between the two palace coups.”

The apparent assertion that the Kennedy assassination was a “palace coup” calls into question all of Seagrave’s case. If he’s fallen off the edge into conspiracy theory in this case, there’s no reason to believe any of the rest is reliable, no matter how logically it’s presented.

That being said, this is worthwhile as an alternative to the “conventional wisdom” on Chinese history of the period. Extensive references and bibliography; endnotes, useful maps.
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setnahkt | 6 altre recensioni | Jul 15, 2018 |
Treatise on biological and chemical warfare, and its use in Laos, Afghanistan, and the Middle East.½
 
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Waltersgn | Mar 12, 2017 |
fantastic read - great feeling for the troubles of china ad a bit of the colonial history that so shaped the nation. also the break away of Taiwan and the nationalists. worth the read.
 
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Brumby18 | 5 altre recensioni | Mar 5, 2016 |
Seagrave writes a comprehensive biography of the Song Sisters: three women who helped shape the destiny of modern China (Meiling, Qingling, and Ailing). However Seagrave also has a clear bias towards Song Chingling and his rather heavy-handed treatment of the other two sisters and their husbands (Chiang Kai-shek and H. H. Kung) shows, and lets down Seagrave's otherwise good writing.

A good read though for an introduction to one of modern China's most powerful political families, though more recent scholarship is probably better for the serious reader's further study.
 
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xuebi | 5 altre recensioni | May 30, 2014 |
Very well written. Disturbing piece of history to read. The level of corruption is astonishing, and shameful.½
 
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Whiskey3pa | 5 altre recensioni | Aug 30, 2013 |
The author mixes decent history, historical anecdotes and wild conspiracy theory into an interesting stew. The style is a mixture of breathless bar room shaggy dog story and quite repetitive retelling of the same basic fact situations in slightly altered form. That said, there is a wealth of usable data and a good bibliography.
 
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agingcow2345 | Jul 5, 2012 |
Note to self: If I should ever happen upon a fortune of gold, best to just sell it at the local "Cash for Gold" joint than risk putting in the bank. It's not that the bank might go under leaving you with nothing -- that would be an acceptable risk. No, the problem is their tendency to say, "gold? What gold? when you try to retrieve it. Then kick you in the stones by having you arrested for trying to negotiate "counterfeit" certificates that they themselves issued!

This is the theme woven throughout Gold Warriors: America's Secret Recovery of Yamashita's Gold. Yamashita was a Japanese general who worked alongside several crown princes to hide enormous caches of gold throughout the Philippines. The gold itself was looted from all of the nations occupied by Japan during WWII as well as the preceding Sino-Japanese War and their occupation of Korea. While movement of this gold has created something of a global shell game, occasionally a marble does appear, such as the appearance of a Ferdinand Marcos.

The movers of this gold are CIA spooks by and large, but are intricately controlled by the banks themselves. It could not work without government involvement, and indeed various governments have placed people strategically in this game. However, it a game where most of the players lose, no matter what side you are on. Those who become public liabilities on all sides have a tendency to become dead quite readily. Virtually all attempts to compensate rightful owners, or even subsequent investors in these fortunes, are at best stonewalled until the aggrieved parties are no more, by natural causes or not.

Every American president since Truman are implicated. Japan, the original thief, continues to be so involved that they've been all but excused from paying war reparations for the millions of lives they have ruined. Some of the money is used to find clandestine operations, and when they go amiss, scandals like the Iran-Contra Affair crop up. Countries and banks involved span the globe, and involve not just developing nations such as the Philippines (which are kept in a persistent state of poverty while their national wealth is siphoned away), but first-world financial giants, particularly the Swiss who have become experts at stealing other people's money.

Gold Warriors is well documented, and the Seagraves do a great job connecting the dots. They have interviewed some of the principles who can no longer speak for themselves (dead men don't talk), and have made use of recently declassified documents. The game is still being played out today -- billions and billions are in the names of people living a life of poverty, unable to even broach the subject without being threatened by imprisonment or death. The story also covers unfortunate champions who, in the process of trying to uncover the truth, have found themselves imprisoned by a network of corruption permeating law enforcement, the judicial system, and even the executive branch of the government. Our presidents are even portrayed as mere pawns of the ultra powerful: the Rockefellers, Rothschilds, and others of their ilk who created the banking system of today.

If you're into conspiracy theories, this book is a must-read for you. If you're not, well, read this and you might be. In of itself, it might seem a little over-the-top; but other books that I've read recently corroborate some of this (The Rape of Nanking by Iris Chang and The Imperial Cruise by James Bradley dovetails seamlessly into what the Seagraves cover in detail). I like the ending quote by Henry Ford: "It is well enough that the people of the nation do not understand our banking and monetary system for, if they did, I believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning." Indeed.½
 
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JeffV | Apr 22, 2012 |
Fascinating alternate take on the life and power of Cixi, the last Empress of China, who is usually presumed to have been very powerful during the closing years of the Qing Dynasty. Seagrave portrays her as a tool manipulated by more powerful members of the government. He presents a pretty powerful case, but whether he is right or not, the story is riveting.
 
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datrappert | 6 altre recensioni | Oct 21, 2009 |
As good as it gets....: Like many other reviewers pointed out, this book deals with general 19th century Chinese History instead of being a pure biographical account of Empress Tzu-Hsi.Carefully researched, it explores the events and myths that surounded this utterly mysterious figure.Futhermore, Seagrave explains how The Empress Dowager has been vilified by racist,looting, lying mediocre pseudo "writters"; Edmund Backhouse and George Morrison.They forever destroyed Tzu-Hsi's image with false accounts of her life, influenced by their own ignorance and Victorian hypocrecy.
Very little is known about Tzu-Hsi's actual role in the Chinese government since the English, in their endless stupidity, burned the Manchu Court Archives.Indeed, Seagrave describes the disgraceful and shameful role the British had in China, from the destruction of the priceless Han Libraby,the completely unjustified Opium Wars, the looting and destruction of the Summer Palace, the looting of the Forbiden City, to the killing of thousands of innocent Chinese civilians, victims of racist Imperial bigotry.
Seagrave spends too much time giving biographical information on secondary characters which makes the book tedious at times.Other than that, his book is very interesting and brings light to certain myths about the last years of the Manchu Emperors of China.I wish the Hardcover edition of this book was not out of print, Vintage uses horrible paper quality and this book deserves a better editorial treatment...
 
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iayork | 6 altre recensioni | Aug 9, 2009 |
I wanted to read more about Tzu Hsi after reading Empress Orchid. I found this book at the library, but it was so big I went past my allowable renews and finally just bought it to finish it. I really, really loved this book. It is not what I expected - I expected to hear all the terrible things, and instead it gave a much different look at the empress and her life. Very interesting and a book I will keep.
 
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autumnesf | 6 altre recensioni | May 20, 2008 |
The life story of the Dowager Empress Tzu Hsi (or Cixi) seems destined to remain shrouded in the fog that surrounds the history of the Forbidden City in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. She has been portrayed as a single-minded ruthless ruler who murdered her son in order to retain power, engaged in sexual escapades with her "eunuchs", and wasted precious military resources on personal luxuries. Sterling Seagrave presents a revisionist view of her as being on the edges of power, barely surviving court intrigues, and an almost unwilling political actor.

The first view was perpetrated by Edmund Backhouse and held from the early 1900's until Backhouse was exposed as a forger and con man by Hugh Trevor-Roper in his 1976 book Hermit of Peking: The Hidden Life of Sir Edmund Backhouse (History & Politics). Backhouse had forged a purportedly Chinese diary. In his own memoirs Backhouse revealed himself to be delusional as well as pornographic. He claimed to have sexual liaisons with a parade of famous people including prime minister Lord Rosebery, Oscar Wilde, and Tzu Hsi herself (some 150 to 200 times by his account). Backhouse also is reported to have fabricated thousands of corroborating documents that he donated to eminent libraries in England.

Seagrave takes Trevor-Roper's work as a starting point and then launches into his own history that soon bogs down in minute details of court intrigue. While it seems clear that Backhouse's accounts have no credibility, it is not so clear that Seagrave's account is a fair, full, and true account either.

Trevor-Roper and Seagrave have their own credibility issues. Trevor-Roper initially authenticated the false `Hitler diaries' in 1983, which benefited his employer the Times of London. He later withdrew this opinion when scientific tests proved the documents were fakes. As for Seagrave he wrote the book Yellow Rain: A Journey Through the Terror of Chemical Warfarein 1981 endorsing the claim that the Soviets engaged in chemical warfare against the Hmong peoples. That dispute has never been resolved.

The recent novels by Anchee Min (Empress Orchid and The Last Empress: A Novel) have expressed a view similar to the one presented by Seagrave. Tzu Hsi is presented as more of a victim of political intrigue than a perpetrator of murderous plots. A version of the older view was set forth in George MacDonald Fraser's Flashman and the Dragon Lady.

On the whole I have found the attempt to understand who Tzu Hsi really was, how much power she possessed, and how she exercised that power to be incredibly frustrating. The Chinese imperial court was so absurdly isolated for so long that it appears impossible to ever determine the truth of the matter. My guess, for what it's worth, is that Seagrave and Min version is likely more true and that the portrayal of her as the evil dragon lady conveniently fed into the justification of British imperial aggression.

This review has strayed farther from discussing the merits of this book than I like to do. Seagrave performed a service in exploding Backhouse's false history, but his writing is not particularly good, he loses the reader (this one anyway) in a maze of details, and he asserts facts with far more certitude than appears warranted. I can not recommend reading the book unless you really want to immerse yourself in the mystery of Tzu Hsi's life. This book tells part of the story, but can not be relied upon to tell it all.
 
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dougwood57 | 6 altre recensioni | Apr 28, 2008 |
This biography lays to rest all the other uncomplimentary biographies about the Dowager Empress, Tzu Hsi which were unfortunately based on fraudulent 19th century accounts. Thoroughly researched and well written, the author presents Tzu Hsi as a mere figurehead. The real power and political intrigue were in the hands of vengeful Manchu Princes. A fascinating look at life behind the walls of the Forbidden City.
 
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beadinggem | 6 altre recensioni | Dec 24, 2007 |
..."reads like a novel but is much better... It would be hard to find a parallel in modern times to the Soongs and their in-laws, from Sun Yat-sen to Chiang Kai-Shek. for the wide swath they cut in history and their influence, mostly for the worse, on so many hundreds of millions of people. Their story is a major part of modern Chinese history, and an important slice of America history as well. The SOONG DYNASTY is a remendous though tragic story, marvelous told." --Prof. Edwin O Reischauer, Harvard [from the jacket]
 
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sungene | 5 altre recensioni | Oct 26, 2007 |
 
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tuesdaynext | 5 altre recensioni | Mar 29, 2007 |
Excellent revision of the life of Tzu Hsi. Too often demonised, this is a great re-evalutaion of her life.
 
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moncrieff | 6 altre recensioni | Mar 24, 2006 |
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