Buy new:
$18.39$18.39
This item cannot be shipped to your selected delivery location. Please choose a different delivery location.
Ships from: LadyLakeBooks Sold by: LadyLakeBooks
Save with Used - Acceptable
$9.58$9.58
This item cannot be shipped to your selected delivery location. Please choose a different delivery location.
Ships from: AzYEA Sold by: AzYEA
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
The Imperial Cruise: A Secret History of Empire and War Paperback – Bargain Price, November 8, 2010
Purchase options and add-ons
In 1905 President Teddy Roosevelt dispatched Secretary of War William Taft, his daughter Alice, and a gaggle of congressmen on a mission to Japan, the Philippines, China, and Korea with the intent of forging an agreement to divide up Asia. This clandestine pact lit the fuse that would-decades later-result in a number of devastating wars: WWII, the Korean War, and the communist revolution in China.
In 2005, James Bradley retraced that epic voyage and discovered the remarkable truth about America's vast imperial past. Full of fascinating characters brought brilliantly to life, The Imperial Cruise will powerfully revise the way we understand U.S. history.
- Print length400 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBack Bay Books
- Publication dateNovember 8, 2010
- Dimensions5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
Frequently bought together

Customers who bought this item also bought
China MiragePaperback$16.16 shippingGet it as soon as Friday, May 31Only 1 left in stock - order soon.

Editorial Reviews
Review
"Incendiary...[The Imperial Cruise] is startling enough to reshape conventional wisdom about Roosevelt's presidency." (New York Times Janet Maslin)
"A provocative study...What is fascinating about Bradley's reconstruction of a largely neglected aspect of Roosevelt's legacy is the impact that his racial theories and his obsession with personal and national virility had on his diplomacy. Engrossing and revelatory, The Imperial Cruise is revisionist history at its best." (New York Times Book Review Ronald Steel)
"[Bradley's] ingenious narrative thread is to track an across-the-pacific 1905 goodwill voyage by Roosevelt's emissaries....[his indictment of Roosevelt] raises tantalizing questions." (American History Gene Santoro)
"For readers under the impression that history is the story of good guys and bad guys...this book could be useful medicine." (USA Today)
"A page-turner." (Associated Press)
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B007MXCB6Y
- Publisher : Back Bay Books; Reprint edition (November 8, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 400 pages
- Item Weight : 1.5 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,531,112 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #5,673 in Asian Politics
- #6,738 in Chinese History (Books)
- #7,666 in Naval Military History
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I was born in Wisconsin surrounded by a loving family of ten and loved swimming in cold lakes. When I was a boy I read an article by former president Harry Truman recommending historical biographies for young readers. His reasoning was that it was easy to follow the storyline of someone’s life, and they would absorb the history of the times on the journey. History soon became my favorite subject and I have been an active reader all my life.
When I was thirteen years old I read an article by James Michener in Reader’s Digest which I paraphrase: “When you’re twenty-two and graduate from college, people will ask you, ‘What do you want to do?’ It’s a good question, but you should answer it when you’re thirty-five.” Michener went on to write that his experiences wandering the globe as a young man later inspired his works on Afghanistan, Spain, Japan and other places.
When I was nineteen years old, I lived and studied in Tokyo for one year. I later brought my Japanese friends home to Wisconsin. My father, John Bradley, had helped raise an American flag on the Japanese island of Iwo Jima and had shot a Japanese soldier dead. My dad warmly welcomed my Japanese buddies.
I traveled around the world when I was twenty-one, from the U.S. to Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand, Nepal, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Turkey, France, Germany, Italy, England and back to the United States.
At twenty-three I graduated with a degree in East Asian history from the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
For the next twenty years I worked in the corporate communications industry in the United States, Japan, England and South Africa.
In my late thirties I took a year off to go around the world again. On this trip I made it to base camp on Mt. Everest and walked among lions in Africa.
My father died when I was forty years old. My search to find out why he didn’t speak about Iwo Jima led me to write Flags of Our Fathers and establish the James Bradley Peace Foundation.
Flags of Our Fathers went on to be a bestseller and a movie, but few saw its potential at first. In fact, as this New York Times article documents, twenty-seven publishers turned the book down over a period of twenty-five months. This difficult and humbling birthing process inspired my live presentation Doing the Impossible.
In 2001 a WWII veteran of the Pacific revealed to me that the U.S. government had kept secret the beheading deaths of eight American airmen on the Japanese island of Chichi Jima, next door to Iwo Jima. After researching their deaths, I informed the eight families and the world of the unknown facts in my book second book Flyboys. (One flyboy got away. His name was George Herbert Walker Bush.)
After writing two books about WWII in the Pacific, I began to wonder about the origins of America’s involvement in that war. The inferno that followed Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor had consumed countless lives, and believing there’s usually smoke before a fire, I set off to search Asia for the original irritants. The result of that search is my third book, The Imperial Cruise.
I am working on my fourth book, about Franklin Delano Roosevelt and China.
Above my desk are the framed words of James Michener:
“Just because you wrote a few books, the world is not going to change. You will find that you will go to sleep and awaken as the same son-of-a-bitch you were the day before.”
For the past ten years, the James Bradley Peace Foundation and Youth For Understanding have sent American students to live with families overseas. Perhaps in the future when we debate whether to fight it out or talk it out, one of these Americans might make a difference.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
What may appear to be a retelling of Alice’s travels delves much deeper into the issues of class and race and other important elements that would continue to affect a developing world that was leaping out of the past to a much modern one. The world and its people were moving and traveling faster than before in terms of communication and transportation, and with that an assembly of gains that was plenty for economic developments. However, biases and myths were being held on to, which Bradley suggests was a means to maintain superiority by class and wealth. For readers that have read his previous books Flags of Our Fathers and Fly Boys, each one retells of the lives of soldiers that fought in the War in the Pacific but he also offers the underbelly of truth that involves the marginal aspects of society. Bradley takes the aftermath of the Spanish American War and asserts the emergence of the United States as an empire to the world stage with President William McKinley in the center. This is a pivotal period when imperialism and anti-imperialism were at the height of heated debate and Mark Twain and Andrew Carnegie were at the forefront and publicly displayed their perspectives literally and economically and socially. Aside from the commentary, Bradley cleverly uses the ‘cruise’ as a metaphor in the world where public exhibitions and spectacles were the norm but at the cost of the regions that were annexed at the end of the Spanish American War. But in addition to the U.S. as a global strength, Japan became a ally to the West by 1902 the Anglo-Japanese Alliance was established; this meant that the land of the rising sun was rising and from there on and history has already written that part of history, the imminent by the 1930s and 1940s.
The Imperial Cruise is an insightful look into the past with a critical eye on events that shaped the past. And James Bradley offers much discussion and thoughts thereafter of a part of history that is still interesting to read and study and to gain understanding and a lesson to share with history buffs or the curious.
Avoiding Congress and impeachment requires a better understanding of the 26th president, who he was, what he believed, and the image he nurtured so carefully right down to the letters he wrote to his children, knowing that they would someday be read by others.
Our image of Theodore Roosevelt is a man's man, a rancher, boxer, wrestler and "Great Bwana," or great white hunter, but the boy whose asthma was so bad, few thought he would survive to adulthood. As a young New York Assemblyman his high pitched voice and purple velvet suit allowed his colleagues and the press to invent derisive metaphors. Roosevelt strove to burn a new image when virility, Aryan superiority, and power were man's highest level of self-actualization. He made it a point to have many photos of him looking resolute in hunter's garb, rifle in hand, complete with fake background, and he would never allow a photograph of him in tennis whites.
Roosevelt continued his image building by going west in deluxe Pullman accommodations to South Dakota, the "Aspen Colorado" of the 19th Century. Giving the impression that he spent years raising cattle and running his own ranch, he spent no more than a few months in as many years, having spent half his inheritance when he eventually sold the failing business.
This need to appear manly was part of his education where he learned that the Rome Empire fell to the Teutonic savages because they were overcivilized and had gone soft. The Teutonic Germans melded with the Anglo-Saxon heritage where it honed its advances in civilization to become the dominant Aryan race that should influence the world and tame the "Pacific negroes." Teddy was convinced the White Christian civilization should be spread across the globe because every other race was distinctly inferior.
As president, Roosevelt had the power and the timing to give expression to his beliefs. He issued the "Roosevelt Corollary" to the Monroe Doctrine, which is instilled in every American today: the U. S. will be the international policeman and reserves the right to interfere in the internal affairs of any other country if it suits our interest. The country goes from a doctrine that is defensive in nature to one that is belligerent. Roosevelt's Secretary of State was ill and near death. His Secretary of War, William Taft was compliant, jovial, and eager to please. He would be Roosevelt's "diplomatic pouch" to the nations he visited by imperial cruise.
Bradley's account affords a whole new, disturbing insight into American History that is unpleasant to read but profoundly interesting. It was Roosevelt who annexed the Philippines after promising them their independence. It was Roosevelt who encouraged Japan to take Korea and fight Russia, with the promise that they would leave the Philippines alone. It wasn't Roosevelt that brokered an agreement between Russia and Japan as much as playing both to get what he wanted for American interests. And it was Roosevelt who suggested that Japan adopt its own Monroe Doctrine. We would hear of it later as the East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. It was from Roosevelt the Japanese culled their mistrust of anything western and white. It also resulted in World War II. In the continuing irony of history, one Roosevelt chastised a country for what another family member told that country to do.
Bradley goes into the Open Door Policy the west demanded, and the Closed Door Policy the U. S. practiced. The annexation of the Philippines is nothing more than a forerunner of the Nazi regime four decades later, as Filipinos are put in concentration camps where disease and starvation take their toll. Moros tribesmen are slaughtered to the applause of the president. Besides the introduction of Christianity to the Sandwich Islands, the missionaries bring pestilence and covetousness that decimates a population and robs the natives of their land. In the final irony the actions of Roosevelt and his contempt for the "inferior Asian races" would be the slow, long-burning fuse that would ignite Asian nationalism and pride.
This is a book that is as easy to read as it is sickening to read. (It has many fascinating details that cannot be added here). It is a necessary book for Americans to learn more about what really happened beyond the glossy presentations taught in history classes. It is an important book because many Americans think in terms of a Roosevelt Corollary without being able to explain what it really means.
When I was finished, I sat back and pondered. The book made me think and still does after I read the last page, last night. I suppose that is the mark of a book's success, one that stays in your mind, long after its over.
"Annex" a copy for yourself and learn what really happened in American History.
You'll even learn what happened to Alice.





