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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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BLOSSOMS IN THE WIND

M. G. Sheftall

Human Legacies of the Kamikaze

Back with Caliber after more than a decade out of print, this is a revelatory and groundbreaking account of Imperial Japan's kamikaze - the suicide pilots of World War II - as told through the eyes of the survivors.
In the final year of World War II, a horrific new weapon was unleashed in the Pacific: the kamikaze. Idealistic, young Japanese men had been taught that there was no greater glory than to sacrifice one's life to defend the homeland. Now, with the war all but lost, thousands of these determined warriors were hastily trained in the basics of piloting an airplane, then sent out in waves to crash into enemy warships, suicide attacks that killed altogether some seven thousand American sailors.

But what of those men who took the sacred oath to die in battle and lived? In the wake of 9/11, ethnographer M. G. Sheftall was given unprecedented access to the cloistered community of Japan's last remaining kamikaze survivors. As an American fluent in Japanese, Sheftall was the only westerner to ever sit face-to-face with these men and hear their stories. The result is a fascinating journey into the lives, indoctrination, and mindsets of the kamikaze, through the eyes of participants who are now lost to time.

M. G. Sheftall is a professor of Modern Japanese Cultural History and Communication at Shizuoka University. He has a PhD in International Relations/Modern Japanese History, awarded by Waseda University in Tokyo, the most highly regarded private university in Japan. A native New Yorker, Sheftall has lived in Japan since 1987.
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Published 2023-05-09 by Dutton Caliber

Comments

Sheftall is an extremely gifted storyteller and Blossoms in the Wind is narrative history at its finest. Under his deft pen, the doomed young pilots, and their comrades who survived, are revealed to be very human... No foreigner has managed to get as close as Sheftall has to not only the kamikaze pilots but their friends and family members... A welcome, and important, source for those seeking to understand, when that old newsreel footage is once again shown on TV, who the kamikaze attackers really were.

[A] scholarly work about the kamikaze 'death cult' that's as lively to read as a popular novel.

Based on rare access to Japanese sources and written with irrepressible verve, M. G. Sheftall's aerial death cult known as the kamikaze brings breathtaking human texture to the near-apocalypse that Imperial Japan unleashed on the U.S. Navy at the close of World War II.

Thanks to unparalleled access to the surviving tokko personnel and a gift for characterization worthy of a first-rank novelist, the author gives us an extraordinary range of humanity... emarkably evenhanded as to the vexed question of war guilt, and enormously rewarding.

Well-written... Outstanding.