This unique book compiles some 120 remarkable letters from Japanese
citizens to General Douglas MacArthur during the postwar occupation of
Japan (1945-1952). Painstakingly culled from a vast collection, these
letters evoke the unfiltered voices of people of all classes and
occupations during the tremendous upheaval of the early postwar period,
when the Japanese were coming to terms with the devastating losses of
the war, adjusting to a new political system, and creating the framework
for economic and social recovery. Written by people of all ages and
walks of life, the letters raise issues ranging from Japanese war crimes
to the future of the emperor system, from the behavior of American
occupation troops to pleas for the United States to annex Japan. Some
writers offered to serve as spies for the occupation forces; others
appealed for help in solving individual problems, protested allegedly
unfair treatment by the occupation, or made detailed recommendations for
the reform of Japanese society. Sodei's running commentary places the
letters in their historical context, and the substantive foreword by
John W. Dower, who drew upon Sodei's research for his Pulitzer
Prize-winning Embracing Defeat, further assesses the significance of the
letters in understanding Japan's occupation experience.