Takeyama Michio, the author of Harp of Burma, was thirty-seven in 1941,
the year of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Husband, father of
children born during the war, and teacher at Japan's elite school of
higher education in Tokyo, he experienced the war on its home front. His
essays provide us with a personal record of the bombing of Tokyo, the
shortage of food, the inability to get accurate information about the
war, the frictions between civilians and military and between his elite
students and other civilians, the mobilization of students into factory
jobs and the military, and the relocation of civilians out of the Tokyo
area. This intimate account of the "scars of war," including personal
anecdotes from Takeyama's students and family, is one of very few
histories from this unique vantage point. Takeyama's writings educate
readers about how the war affected ordinary Japanese and convey his
thoughts about Japan's ally Germany, the Tokyo War Crimes Trial, and the
immediate postwar years. Beautifully translated by Richard H. Minear,
these honest and moving essays are a fresh look at the history of Japan
during the Asia-Pacific War.