St. Martin's, 429 pp., $24.95
Penguin, 299 pp., $9.95 (paper)
St. Martin's, 306 pp., $14.95 (paper)
University of California Press, 297 pp., $12.95 (paper)
Congressional Research Service, 79 pp., free
Japan Development Bank, JDB Research Report #20, 88 pp., free
77 pp., free
113 pp., $5.00
MIT Japan Program, 23 pp., $12.50
MIT Japan Program, 64 pp., $12.50
It is easy to imagine the dilemma the publisher faced when deciding whether to call its new book The Coming War With Japan. The authors are not widely known. George Friedman is a professor at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Meredith LeBard, originally from Australia, teaches writing at a community college in Harrisburg. If a book by these two had been published under a title that would accurately sum up its argument—such as, After the Cold War: Diverging National Interests Between Japan and America—few people would have paid much attention to it. By swinging for the fences with an inflammatory title and hyped-up passages every few chapters on the 'inevitability' of war, both the publisher and authors virtually guaranteed that reviewers would say, as I'm about to, that the book does not come close to proving its announced case.
Review, 6633 words
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