Suggestions for Further Reading

These books are suggested for supplementary reading if s you have access to them or wish to purchase them from the publishers. They are not approved nor officially supplied by the War Department. They have been selected because they give additional information and represent different points of view.

Ten Years in Japan. By Joseph C. Grew. Published by Simon and Schuster, 1230 Sixth Ave., New York 13, N. Y. (1944).

The Japanese Enemy. By Hugh Byas. Published by Alfred A. Knopf, 501 Madison Ave., New York 22, N. Y. (1942).

The Basis for Peace in the Far East.By Nathaniel Peffer. Published by Harper and Brothers, 49 East 33d St., New York 16, N.Y. (1942).

Occupy Japan? An article by Nathaniel Peffer in Harper’s Magazine, April 1944.

Japan: A World Problem. By H. J. Timperley. Published by John Day Co., 2 West 45th St., New York 19, N. Y. (1942).

Shadow over Asia. By T. A. Bisson. No. 29 of Headline Books, published by Foreign Policy Association, 22 East 38th St., New York, N. Y. (1941).

Modern Japan. By William H. Chamberlin. Published by Institute of Pacific Relations and Webster Publishing Co., 1800 Washington Ave.; St. Louis 3, Mo. (1942).

“What Future for Japan?” and “Breaking Up The Japanese Empire.” Two articles by Lawrence K. Rosinger in Foreign Policy Reports, September 1, 1943 and June 1, 1944.

“What to Do With Japan?” An article in Fortune Magazine, April 1944.

The Control of Germany and Japan. By Harold G. Moulton and Louis Marlio. Published by Brookings Institution, 722 Jackson Place, N. W., Washington 6, D. C. (1944).

Our Enemy Japan. By Wilfred Fleisher. Published by Infantry journal, 1115 Seventeenth St., N. W., Washington 6, D. C. (1944).

Know Your Enemy Japan. By Anthony Jenkinson. Published by Institute of Pacific Relations, 1 East 54th St., New York 22, N. Y. (1944).

Japan: Its Resources and Industries. By Clayton D. Carus and Charles L. McNichols. Published by Harper and Brothers (1944).

Until They Eat Stones. By Russell Brines. Published by J. B. Lippincott, 227-231 South 6th St., Philadelphia 5, Pa. (1944).

From EM 15: What Shall Be Done about Japan after Victory? (1945)