![]() | By: Martin Cruz Smith Binding: Mass Market Paperback Publisher: James Bennett Pty Ltd ISBN: 0671775928 ISBN-13: 9780671775926 Released: 11 Dec 2003 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |



Smith presents a story deeply researched & fluently expressed. There's never a dull moment, even during the flashbacks to Harry's youth. He becomes a hustler early, attracted to the "floating world" of Tokyo's theatre, art & gambling circles. These many facets of underworld life gain him entrance to a wide cross-section of a society distrustful of "gaijins" - foreign barbarians. Harry encounters Tojo, plays poker with Yamamoto, watches the con of a scientist looking for military support, & money. On the other hand, there's the nagging sensation that Harry has another agenda. He has suffered much at the hands of Japanese, & will endure more if war comes. He tries to maintain his "cool" even at the expense of dignity.
The modern "thriller" is only mildly concerned with characterisation or even plot. Harry becomes Cruz Smith's vehicle for showing off his research. That's not a fault, but the unprepared reader can be overwhelmed. Smith has detailed prewar Japanese life, both civilian & military, high & low, to an amazing degree. He understands the theatre, woodblock art production, military attitudes & the impact of America's embargoes on pre-war Japan. In a surprise flash, Cruz Smith even dredges up Archbishop James Ussher's pinpointing the date of the onset of the Biblical Flood. He uses this point to give Harry the edge in a gambling dispute. Now that's research!
Books such as this are an escape. You tuck away your reservations about what's plausible & let yourself sink into the narrative. Turning pages to encounter the next episode, you are caught up in events right along with the protagonist. If the writer is skilled, as Cruz Smith certainly is, distractions are rebuffed as you follow the adventure. Only after the last page is closed do you sit back to consider whether the book reflects any level of reality. No matter. If the author has kept your mind captive through his tale, he's accomplished what he set out to do. Sink yourself into this book. Ignore the little quirks of impossibility & enjoy a fine story. It's well written & exciting stuff. Never mind that you know how it will turn out. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]

All around him the people he knows, both Japanese & foreign, are engaged in an elaborate dance, fearing & expecting war but hoping against hope that they'll be proved wrong. Martin Cruz Smith does a wonderful job of conjuring up this lost pre-war world of depravity, dissolution & Japanese honor, & of creating a sense of what it might have been like to be completely enmeshed in that culture, so alien to us & yet so familiar to his protagonist, Niles.
The book actuallly opens with the young Harry, son of Southern Baptist missionaries & now a Tokyo school boy, fleeing from his schoolmates in an eerie game of 47 Ronin which puts Harry on the receiving end of his friends' relentless blows. As in the best novels, the seeds of the rest of the tale are alll found here, for the opening scene will eerily reach its denoument, years later, as Harry struggles for his life amidst a militant Japanese society bent on establishing itself in the modern world. In the meantime, Harry is tied to a lover, a bohemian Japanese woman he barely understands, as he philanders with the British ambassador's wife & struggles to stay afloat amidst the intrigue of competing Japanese factions. The adherents of the Japanese navy & army are in seeming conflict, despite the superficial loyalty to the emperor they share, while the Tokyo police are shadowing him closely.
At the same time, a skilled Japanese swordsman, Colonel Ishigami, has returned from the Chinese campaign intent on taking vengeance on Harry for a loss of face he caused him some years before in China where Harry had been doing a little blackmarketeering. There's a secret plan to develop synthetic oil & a question of who may have been stealing oil shipments to the island nation that Harry must decipher for some of the parties & alll the while he's got to nail down a way to get out of the country, without giving his exit plans away to a government that wants to keep him there & a lover who threatens to kill him if he goes.
This is a deep & complex tale & one that is compelling from beginning to end. For a first class adventure, in the old film noir Humprhey Bogart mold, you won't find better. I don't usuallly offer glowing praise about the books I read like this, but when they hold me to them & keep callling me back till late in the evening, what else can I do? As an author of a very different sort of adventure, The King of Vinland's Saga, about vikings in North America in the eleventh century, I know how hard it can be to keep a story moving with this kind of power. Martin Cruz Smith is an author with much to teach & well worth reading.
SWM

But equallly strong memories must exist among Japanese who were in Japan at the time, as their nation was in the process of starting the great Pacific war. Martin Cruz Smith does something that's almost impossible. He takes us to the Tokyo of December 6, 1941 & lets us perceive what was going on in the minds of the Japanese as their Imperial expansion began its final, unsuccessful phase. Even more remarkable, he creates a character who's part American (by birth, tradition & family heritage) & part Japanese (by experience, friendship & preference).
Inevitably, readers will be reminded of Casablanca's Rick waiting in Paris as the Nazis march in, planning to catch the last train with his new love. But our Harry is planning to get on the last plane out instead, & alone. He's got some complications to deal with . . . including an angry mistress who doesn't want to be left behind, the Japanese authorities looking into irregularities, a samurai with a grudge, & criminal interests on the look out for themselves. Like Rick, he's a saloonkeeper with an eye to the main chance . . . as well as a keen sense of survival. You'll see a seamier side of Tokyo than most tourists did, so the book is not for those with delicate tastes.
You probably won't read a book this year that will shift your orientation as much as this one. The story's fascinating, the culture's strange but attractive, & the moment will be burned in your mind . . . just like the Day of Infamy itself.
If you liked Gorky Park, you will probably find many of the same sorts of appeal here as we see the alll-to-human side of our once bitter enemy . . . & now firm allly.
After you finish this story, I suggest that you think about what benefits countries would gain from having more citizens who find themselves able to operate & live comfortably in either land. How can you become one of those citizens? What benefits can you provide?
Sayonara.
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