The translation will be published in four volumes. There will be maps with details of campaigns and battles; each volume is approx. 150,000 words.
Shiba Ryōtarō (1923-1996) is one of Japan's best-known writers, famous for his direct tone and unflinching depictions of war. He was drafted into the Japanese Army, served in the Second World War and subsequently worked for the newspaper Sankei Shimbun. He is most famous for his numerous works of historical fiction.
Translated by Paul McCarthy, Andrew Cobbing, and Juliet Winters Carpenter
Edited by Phyllis Birnbaum
"I'm stunned at the sheer level of detail that has gone into this
volume in particular... It's not just the results of the decisions
made and how they ultimately affected the war's outcome that are
included, but the discussions that led to those decisions being
made and how the people who had to act upon those decisions felt
about it. Considering the author is Japanese and not from a neutral
nation, he does a spectacular job of following the war from both
sides, in all spheres of combat and at all levels in the chain of
command, from Emperor and Tsar to common soldier... With the war
being fought in fairly sharp bursts, this means that the pace of
the story is kept very high. Once again, Shiba crosses genres
perfectly, with the story having the pace of a thriller, but the
detail of a history text. What makes the story even better is that
it's not told from one perspective, as it covers the psychological
impact of the war on both commanders and soldiers, again on both
sides." - Iain Wear, The Bookbag, January 2013."Shiba Ryōtarō is
Japan’s best-loved author, and Clouds above the Hill is his most
popular and influential work. In it he celebrates the
transformative spirit of Meiji Japan and examines Japan’s
unexpected victory in the Russo-Japanese War, providing a
thoughtful and thought-provoking perspective on those dramatic
times and the people at their center. This distinguished
translation of a modern classic is a landmark event." - Donald
Keene, University Professor Emeritus, Columbia University, USA.
"Shiba Ryōtarō wrote that from the Meiji Restoration of 1868
through the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905, Japan transformed its
premodern "brown sugar" society into a modern "white sugar" one,
eagerly scooping up crystals of the new substance in the drive to
create society anew. During the Pacific War, by contrast, the
nation’s leaders merely went through empty motions, and Japan
collapsed. This book looks back on that earlier era through the
lens of the later tragedy, depicting the struggles and growth to
maturity of Japan’s young men." - Tanaka Naoki, former Member of
the Japanese Parliament and President of the Center for
International Public Policy Studies, Japan.
"When the Russo-Japanese War was over and Japan had won, the
commanding generals from both sides came together face to face at
Suishiying. They paid honor to each other’s bravery and expressed
mutual condolences, and before parting they shook hands. I have
visited that very place, which seems to me less the site of a
Japanese victory than a monument to the souls of fallen soldiers on
both sides. I have no doubt that Clouds above the Hills was also
written to honor those souls." - Anno Mitsumasa, author and
illustrator of children’s books in Japan.
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