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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Popular Memoir, April 27, 2000
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Manchurian Legacy is the book,I wished that I could have read when I was in the sixth grade.Readers of that age group could easily identify with the character of Kazuko as a young woman. It is rare to find a book that can appeal to both young and old readers. The author, Kazuko Kuramoto apologizes for her writing, as English is her third language. I believe, this is what makes the book so readable. She does not bog the reader down with flowery language. What Kazuko does give the reader is a feeling of what it was like to have lived in Manchuria as a colonialist before and doing WW II.The real charm of the book is that it does not assume the reader has any knowledge of the historical events that shaped the narrative.A brief explanation that doesn't bog down the story gives you a context to understand and enjoy her memoir. The immense popularity of a book, "Angela's Ashes" shows that readers have a desire for personal stories of the ordinary man. Kazuko's story deserves to be read by as wide a audience as "Angela's Ashes"
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Historical Insight, June 11, 2008
By 
C. Swallows "Chas Reader" (Gainesville, FL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Manchurian Legacy: Memoirs of a Japanese Colonist (Paperback)
I ended up reading the book, Manchurian Legacy, in one sitting even though I had a lot of other things to do. That is rare for me. The story mesmerized me as I felt like I was learning something about my roots, my mother.

My Japanese mother, to get away from the merciless firebombing of her city, at the age of 19 volunteered as a member of a repatriation team assigned to travel to Manchuria and to help in the repatriation of Japanese colonials there. After training for about a month, she flew to a city in the center of Manchuria on what happened to be the same day that the Russians invaded. She had quite an adventure hiding, being captured, incarcerated, starving, transported by rail in box cars and then force marched thru Korea, to be saved ironically by the enemy American soldiers that she was trying to escape. I am amazed at what she had to go through to get back to Japan.

Not only did this book gave me an insight to what life was like in Manchuria for the Japanese during the end of World War II, it also gave me a glimpse of post-war Japan where both my father and father-in-law were stationed as part of the occupation forces. The stories about the period during the Russian invasion and how they and the local Chinese treated the Japanese colonials was very revealing. Even though Mrs. Kuramoto's experience was not so harrowing as my mother's adventure, the description of the area and the everyday life of the colonials helped me to understand this period of history in this part of the world.

Even though the second part of the book about post-war Japan did not relate to my mother since she had a support system in place when she returned to Japan, the description of Mrs. Kuramoto's experiences with members of the American occupation force helped me to understand the situation that my father lived through during his term of duty in Japan.

Enough of how the book impacted me. Here is a synopsis of the book: The Manchurian Legacy is a story about the life of a young woman born in Manchuria to Japanese parents living there during World War II. Her father is a minor Japanese government official which gave the family trappings of luxury which were not enjoyed by the local occupied Chinese residents. Kazuko was a patriotic 17 year old and to her parent's dismay, volunteered to join the Red Cross to aid in the war effort against the corrupt capitalists and communists. When Japan surrendered, the Russians invaded and the Chinese revolted, sending the Japanese colonialists into hiding. How the colonialists fared over the next year is a testament to their entrepreneurship and tenacious desire to survive in a culture hostile to their former oppressors. The post-war portion of the book focused on how Kazuko coped in Japan after being shipped there on U.S. transport ship and after being rejected by other relatives. This is also a story of her relationship with soldiers and contractors with the American occupation forces, and her struggles in a country not so accepting of the returning colonialists.

A great read and highly recommended.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Manchurian Legacy, November 22, 2004
Recently I was given this book to read by a friend who is preparing to teach a university course on Japanese culture and women's narrative. I am voraciously reading the books that she is considering for her course and giving her feedback. I couldn't put this book down and cried at the end. What more can one say? I sit here now as a foreigner living in Japan and find this book offers me a window into Japanese history, culture and the voice of women that is not normally acknowledged. Everyone should read this book.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Personal experience about year 1944 and after, January 18, 2012
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This review is from: Manchurian Legacy: Memoirs of a Japanese Colonist (Paperback)
This book of personal experience immediately after wwII in Japan and it's colony can be read together with Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War II which has a macro view. Not much mentioned about the author's growing up life between 1927 and 1944 in Manchuria or Manchukoku, if you are interested in this period of history or personal experience which is difficult to get now. There's two type of Japanese living at their colony, one was employee by large company and government and their subcontractors, another one was the entrepreneur; the former and their dependents live in their own Japanese quarter, the latter or the underdog had to mixed with locals and make a living by selling them goods or services and compete with locals. Both had different memory of their colonial life.

This book is easy to read. For the beginner to Manchuria history it is recommended.
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Manchurian Legacy: Memoirs of a Japanese Colonist
Manchurian Legacy: Memoirs of a Japanese Colonist by Kazuko Kuramoto (Paperback - September 30, 2004)
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