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THE VANISHED

THE "EVAPORATED PEOPLE" OF JAPAN IN STORIES AND PHOTOGRAPHS

A cheerless little book in which a journalist calls attention to but does not probe deeply into one of the sorriest aspects...

Each year, some 100,000 Japanese opt to disappear, a phenomenon depicted here in a small collection of essays and photographs.

Mauger, a French journalist, and documentary photographer Remael (and various generally unhelpful and uneasy interpreters), traveled around Japan in an attempt to show this underbelly of Japanese life. The present work, first published in France in 2014, is an expansion of an earlier piece in the magazine XXI, where Mauger works. To be in debt or to fail at school, in business, or in one’s marriage is to lose face in Japan, and the shame of this drives thousands to become johatsu, Japanese for “evaporated people.” Most of the author’s subjects are men, but she tells one especially poignant story of a woman in an arranged marriage who abandoned her child to flee an impossible situation. To find out why the johatsu opted out and how they were surviving in their new, often grim, surroundings, Mauger talked to a number of them and to the family members they left behind. On what was definitely not a holiday tour, she visited inhumane Toyota City; the Tojinbo cliffs, a mecca for runaways famous for its record suicide rates; ghettos run by the Japanese Mafia; a reform camp for unsuccessful business executives; and the bleak region created by the Fukushima nuclear disaster. A few dozen color photographs bear witness to the loneliness and sadness of the “evaporated people” and the ugliness of their surroundings. There are no happy endings in Mauger’s report, no prodigal sons returning to open arms. Most of the stories are depressing and occasionally moving, and many are just brief sketches.

A cheerless little book in which a journalist calls attention to but does not probe deeply into one of the sorriest aspects of life in modern Japan.

Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-5107-0826-6

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing

Review Posted Online: May 22, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2016

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HOW TO FIGHT ANTI-SEMITISM

A forceful, necessarily provocative call to action for the preservation and protection of American Jewish freedom.

Known for her often contentious perspectives, New York Times opinion writer Weiss battles societal Jewish intolerance through lucid prose and a linear playbook of remedies.

While she was vividly aware of anti-Semitism throughout her life, the reality of the problem hit home when an active shooter stormed a Pittsburgh synagogue where her family regularly met for morning services and where she became a bat mitzvah years earlier. The massacre that ensued there further spurred her outrage and passionate activism. She writes that European Jews face a three-pronged threat in contemporary society, where physical, moral, and political fears of mounting violence are putting their general safety in jeopardy. She believes that Americans live in an era when “the lunatic fringe has gone mainstream” and Jews have been forced to become “a people apart.” With palpable frustration, she adroitly assesses the origins of anti-Semitism and how its prevalence is increasing through more discreet portals such as internet self-radicalization. Furthermore, the erosion of civility and tolerance and the demonization of minorities continue via the “casual racism” of political figures like Donald Trump. Following densely political discourses on Zionism and radical Islam, the author offers a list of bullet-point solutions focused on using behavioral and personal action items—individual accountability, active involvement, building community, loving neighbors, etc.—to help stem the tide of anti-Semitism. Weiss sounds a clarion call to Jewish readers who share her growing angst as well as non-Jewish Americans who wish to arm themselves with the knowledge and intellectual tools to combat marginalization and defuse and disavow trends of dehumanizing behavior. “Call it out,” she writes. “Especially when it’s hard.” At the core of the text is the author’s concern for the health and safety of American citizens, and she encourages anyone “who loves freedom and seeks to protect it” to join with her in vigorous activism.

A forceful, necessarily provocative call to action for the preservation and protection of American Jewish freedom.

Pub Date: Sept. 10, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-593-13605-8

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Crown

Review Posted Online: Aug. 22, 2019

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ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN

Bernstein and Woodward, the two Washington Post journalists who broke the Big Story, tell how they did it by old fashioned seat-of-the-pants reporting — in other words, lots of intuition and a thick stack of phone numbers. They've saved a few scoops for the occasion, the biggest being the name of their early inside source, the "sacrificial lamb" H**h Sl**n. But Washingtonians who talked will be most surprised by the admission that their rumored contacts in the FBI and elsewhere never existed; many who were telephoned for "confirmation" were revealing more than they realized. The real drama, and there's plenty of it, lies in the private-eye tactics employed by Bernstein and Woodward (they refer to themselves in the third person, strictly on a last name basis). The centerpiece of their own covert operation was an unnamed high government source they call Deep Throat, with whom Woodward arranged secret meetings by positioning the potted palm on his balcony and through codes scribbled in his morning newspaper. Woodward's wee hours meetings with Deep Throat in an underground parking garage are sheer cinema: we can just see Robert Redford (it has to be Robert Redford) watching warily for muggers and stubbing out endless cigarettes while Deep Throat spills the inside dope about the plumbers. Then too, they amass enough seamy detail to fascinate even the most avid Watergate wallower — what a drunken and abusive Mitchell threatened to do to Post publisher Katherine Graham's tit, and more on the Segretti connection — including the activities of a USC campus political group known as the Ratfuckers whose former members served as a recruiting pool for the Nixon White House. As the scandal goes public and out of their hands Bernstein and Woodward seem as stunned as the rest of us at where their search for the "head ratfucker" has led. You have to agree with what their City Editor Barry Sussman realized way back in the beginning — "We've never had a story like this. Just never."

Pub Date: June 18, 1974

ISBN: 0671894412

Page Count: 372

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Oct. 10, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 1974

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