In 1920 the author entered the secret service of the Governor-General of Manchuria, then under China. At the time of the...

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SECRET AGENT OF JAPAN

In 1920 the author entered the secret service of the Governor-General of Manchuria, then under China. At the time of the Japanese occupation, he was forced into their service, unwillingly. Five years later he made his escape, and this is the inside story of those years, of a fanatical, barbarous program, of persecution of Jews, Russians and Chinese, of the introduction of narcotics, gambling, prostitution, for the purpose of weakening the native population, of wholesale kidnappings, sabotage, seizure of railroads, infamies and tortures, and so on. An almost hysterical investive, but if true, a justifiable one. It seems authentic.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 1938

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