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Blood River: The Terrifying Journey Through The World’s Most Dangerous Country

September 2, 2010

Blood River: The Terrifying Journey Through The World’s Most Dangerous Country Review


I’m working in the DR Congo on a US State Department contract. I live in Kisangani, between the Tshopo River and the Congo River. This book has provided valuable insights to the many sights and cultural activities that I see here every day. Yes, it was necessary (in 2010) to attend the auction of my luggage when the plane from Nairobi brought me here. If I hadn’t won the bidding, some person that I didn’t even know would have left the airport with my bags…. Some things never change here. Including the dramatic moment when the passengers were ushered one-by-one into the office of the “airport customs chief” to be scrutinized and questioned until the proper “fees” had been handed over for the privilege of attending the luggage auction.
If you are coming to the Congo or you just want to see how low a government and culture can sink following its heyday in the early 1960’s and post-revolutionary nadir, read this book. You won’t believe most of it unless you actually come here. The burned-out hulk of the airport as your modern jet passenger plane comes in for a landing will be your first visual testimonial to the realization that the entire region is slipping inexorably into final chaos.

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Blood River: The Terrifying Journey Through The World’s Most Dangerous Country Overview

Published to rave reviews in the United Kingdom and named a Richard & Judy Book Club selection—the only work of nonfiction on the 2008 list—Blood River is the harrowing and audacious story of Tim Butcher’s journey in the Congo and his retracing of legendary explorer H. M. Stanley’s famous 1874 expedition in which he mapped the Congo River. When Daily Telegraph correspondent Tim Butcher was sent to Africa in 2000 he quickly became obsessed with the legendary Congo River and the idea of recreating Stanley’s journey along the three-thousand-mile waterway. Despite warnings that his plan was suicidal, Butcher set out for the Congo’s eastern border with just a backpack and a few thousand dollars hidden in his boots. Making his way in an assortment of vehicles, including a motorbike and a dugout canoe, helped along by a cast of characters from UN aid workers to a pygmy rights advocate, he followed in the footsteps of the great Victorian adventurer. An utterly absorbing narrative that chronicles Butcher’s forty-four-day journey along the Congo River, Blood River is an unforgettable story of exploration and survival.

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Color Atlas of Histology

August 31, 2010

Color Atlas of Histology Review


I recommend this book for those who are seeking a basic introductory book to histology. The chapters and content have a nice flow, and illustrations complement the diagrams very well. There aren’t a lot of special stains featured, but more focused on basic H&E.

Color Atlas of Histology Overview

Provides students with information on the structure and function of tissues and organs at the cellular level. Hystophysiologic and clinical information feature at the beginning of each chapter and thumbnail illustrations have been added to the legend.

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Hiking Glacier and Waterton Lakes National Parks, 3rd: A Guide to More Than 60 of the Area’s Greatest Hiking Adventures (Regional Hiking Series)

August 30, 2010

Hiking Glacier and Waterton Lakes National Parks, 3rd: A Guide to More Than 60 of the Area’s Greatest Hiking Adventures (Regional Hiking Series) Review


I do a lot of hiking in the national parks and rely on Falcon Guides for good trail information. I have the first edition of the Glacier/Waterton guide so I thought I would get the latest edition for a recent trip. I still like this edition, but I agree with some other reviewers that there are some disappointments. Gone are the elevation profiles (which give you a snapshot of the gain and loss for the hike). As also mentioned, now several trails are combined on one map (GPS-compatible). That actually proves useful when several trails are part of a larger trail system (e.g., the Grinnell Complex), but this can be confusing for other trails (not to mention a little harder to find the maps for individual trails).

The first edition didn’t have an index, so having one here is a plus (even if, as someone else mentioned, it’s not as good as the second edition’s). The third edition also has a nice trail comparison (though it should have distances) indicating which trails have waterfalls, lakes, meadows, etc. This edition also has several more pages of general information than the first edition, and descriptions of two additional trails. Although most of the trail descriptions seem to be the same as the first edition, the pictures accompanying them are new (though still not that great because they are in black and white).

On the whole, I recommend this book if you don’t have an earlier edition. If you have the first or second edition you can probably get by with them if you also check other sources for updated park information (such as the free shuttle on the Going-to-the-Sun Road).

Hiking Glacier and Waterton Lakes National Parks, 3rd: A Guide to More Than 60 of the Area’s Greatest Hiking Adventures (Regional Hiking Series) Feature

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Hiking Glacier and Waterton Lakes National Parks, 3rd: A Guide to More Than 60 of the Area’s Greatest Hiking Adventures (Regional Hiking Series) Overview

This comprehensive guide covers more than 850 miles of trails.

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Human Geography in Action

August 28, 2010

Human Geography in Action Review


This textbook is just your average textbook. For my class we had to buy an online code for the course which included the book all online, but comparing the two, I find the book much easier to read and review. The pictures help out and the author goes at a good enough pace as to where I can keep up and understand.

Human Geography in Action Overview

This book/CD package takes an active learning approach to human geography. Computerized activities expose readers to GIS, spreadsheets, simulation and graphing—without having to learn four different complex software packages. The exercises explore AIDS, population growth, jobs, environmental change, baseball and other interesting topics. This book teaches readers how to collect, analyze, interpret and present information.

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Moon Living Abroad in Costa Rica

August 28, 2010

Moon Living Abroad in Costa Rica Review


The book is a bit out dated. The immigration and traffic laws have changed a bit sense the publication.It’s written from a female point of view. I think she could have spent more time on ways to survive with less money. I got the impression that she had a moderate amount of money to spend. The book was informative and detailed in a lot of ways.

Moon Living Abroad in Costa Rica Overview

Erin Van Rheenen, the expert on relocating to Costa Rica, has made the move herself and provides insight and first-hand advice to navigating the language and culture of this beautiful country. Van Rheenen outlines all the information needed in a smart, organized, and straightforward manner, making planning the move abroad manageable. Moon Living Abroad Costa Rica makes the moving and transition process easy for businesspeople, students, teachers, retirees, and professionals. Moon Living Abroad Costa Rica is packed with essential information and must-have details on getting established abroad, including how to obtain visas, ways to arrange finances, tips on gaining employment, advice on choosing schools, and where to find health care. This relocation guide also includes practical advice on how to rent or buy a home for a variety of needs and budgets, whether it’s a condo in the San José suburb of Escazú, a wooden house in coastal Tortuguero, or a mountain retreat with a view of Arenal Volcano. All Moon Living Abroad Guides include color photos, black-and-white photographs, black-and-white illustrations, and maps.

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The Outermost House: A Year of Life On The Great Beach of Cape Cod

August 26, 2010

The Outermost House: A Year of Life On The Great Beach of Cape Cod Review

Henry Beston wanted to find his voice as a writer. He had served as an ambulance driver in France during WWI and since then had earned a living on children’s fairy tales and magazine articles. He fell under the spell of Outer Cape Cod while writing about the coast guardsmen stationed at Eastham, and in 1925 had a small cottage built in the dunes between ocean and marsh. There he spent much of the next two years, finding his voice as a writer and much more. The The Outermost House: A Year of Life on the Great Beach of Cape Cod, published in late 1928, is the eloquent result. Never out of print since its publication, it has always been one of the most influential classics of nature writing. His strength was not scientific observation, but the exploration of our relationship with nature.

Alone on the beach, he lived in his 20×16-foot cabin, which he called the Fo’castle for its ship-like economy of function and intimacy with the ocean and the weather. The land and sea birds, the smells and sounds of the beach, the wind, sea, sand, plants and animals–all move to the heartbeat of the year’s passage. Beston’s writing is both detailed and metaphorical; he had the rare gift of sharing his observations without monopolizing the frame.

He was aware that Nature has its own momentum and all the occurrences about which he wrote are subject to that dominant force. An old wrecked ship, thrown up in a storm, showed its bones against the sky and then receded again. Of seals, he wrote: “They have a trick of swimming unperceived under a flock of sea ducks, seizing one of the unwary birds from underneath, and then disappearing with their mouths full of flesh and frantic feathers. A confusion follows; the survivors leap from the water with wildly beating wings, they scatter, wheel, and gather again, and presently nature has erased every sign of the struggle, and the sea rolls on as before.” These life-and-death events are just a ripple in the fabric of the elemental world.

Finally in September, Beston spent a night on the beach and before dawn, “In the luminous east, two great stars aslant were rising…Betelgeuse and Bellatrix, the shoulders of Orion.” His beach year at an end, the observer distilled his impressions: his reverence and gratitude for “the great natural drama,” his understanding that creation is still going on, that the observation is only relevant to that moment, that “poetry is as necessary to comprehension as science.” Beston was convinced that a reverence for nature must underpin all our achievements, or else they can’t have true meaning. His writings influenced others who took the case forward. He moved to Maine and lived quietly with his family, never an activist, too much the literary perfectionist to ever be a prolific writer. Though he wrote several other books, none of them were quite as perfectly integrated as The Outermost House: A Year of Life on the Great Beach of Cape Cod. Much as I cherish his Maine writing, this is the book that I turn to again and again for peace and perspective.

Beston had the Fo’castle moved back from the encroaching sea a time or two, then donated it to the Audubon Society in 1959; it finally perished in “The Blizzard of ‘78.” In 1961, forty miles and 43,500 acres of beach and dune were protected by the creation of the Cape Cod National Seashore under the stewardship of the National Park Service.

I listened to the excellent 2007 audio production (strangely, the first), read by Brett Barry. Beston’s language has such a rich cadence that it’s a wonderful choice for audio, especially if you are already familiar with the book. On the other hand there are so many passages that you’ll want to linger over…I think most committed readers should not start their audio careers here. But whether you read or listen, you must experience this wonderful book.

Linda Bulger, 2009

The Outermost House: A Year of Life On The Great Beach of Cape Cod Feature

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The Outermost House: A Year of Life On The Great Beach of Cape Cod Overview

The seventy-fifth anniversary edition of the classic book about Cape Cod, “written with simplicity, sympathy, and beauty” (New York Herald Tribune)

A chronicle of a solitary year spent on a Cape Cod beach, The Outermost House has long been recognized as a classic of American nature writing. Henry Beston had originally planned to spend just two weeks in his seaside home, but was so possessed by the mysterious beauty of his surroundings that he found he “could not go.”

Instead, he sat down to try and capture in words the wonders of the magical landscape he found himself in thrall to: the migrations of seabirds, the rhythms of the tide, the windblown dunes, and the scatter of stars in the changing summer sky. Beston argued that, “The world today is sick to its thin blood for the lack of elemental things, for fire before the hands, for water, for air, for the dear earth itself underfoot.” Seventy-five years after they were first published, Beston’s words are more true than ever.

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Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.)

August 17, 2010

Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.) Review


Retracing his youthful trek, this veteran travel writer charts conversations and shares sights. It starts off powerfully in Xian, at the start of the 7,000-mile route. Without photos, his narrative carries the force of a documentary film’s record.

Rome at one end and China at the other, so distant, traded in legends. Silk grew on trees; “vegetable lambs” sprouted overnight cotton. A thousand years of commerce, ended by shipping, Mongol invasions, and alternate routes, left much of the settings he passes in ruins. Others, as in the PRC, obliterate whatever charm, devotion, or value remained. “To follow a road is to follow diversity: a flow of interlocked voices, in a cloud of dust.” (31)

He listens to many voices, fluent as he is in Mandarin & Russian. Thubron’s strength is how he recounts the slow madness of a young wife who ran away before consummating her marriage, Persian men obsessed with female chastity and Western pornography, a shanghaied survivor of the Taliban and warlords, and polite resisters to Communist oppression or Islamic fundamentalism. The author’s British identity marks him as target of entreaties opportunists, lonely men, drunken drivers, a Tibetan monk, eager students, and cunning informers, perhaps. He roams at a time when SARS threatens, and when the Iraqi invasion casts him as a representative, unwillingly, of a different type of inhumanity but one that links him to a long trail of such across the road taken by forces under Genghis Khan, the Shah, Khomeini’s forces, Stalin, and the original Assassins.

He sums up on his second traverse of this trail what survives and what does not. The cliff temples of Matisi with a thousand miniature Buddhas as murals have been “defaced by Red Guards, each one scratched with an obliterating cross, as if it were a mathematical equation that hadn’t worked out.” (79) Near Khotan he tells, too fleetingly, of the strange Tocharian mummies with Celtic-like tartans and Caucasoid features in that desert climate. Among the rebellious Uighir, he feels apart: “Thousands of miles from anyone who knows you, you have the illusion that your past is lighter, scarcely yours at all. . . .Dangerously, you may come to feel invulnerable. You fear only your failure to understand or to reach where you are going. Sometimes you are moved by a kind of heartless curiousity, which shames you only on your return home. At other times you are touched, even torn; but you move on.” (115)

As this traveler’s tale continues, the lassitude and oddness of the journey weighs on him and you. He crosses the “shadow-line” as he flies over, given border tensions, the Kyrgyz-Russian-Chinese frontiers, “where the Chinese world elided with the Turkic– where Uighir dreams simmered, and domes appeared, and people started to talk about God.” (156) His stories of the Kyrgyz passes, full of drinking bouts, harrowing brushes with death, and near-pagan vistas of primeval rawness, linger. Tangerine slopes, apricot cliff, turquoise river, coal-black screes: these beckon a certain breed of native and a visitor able to recount their unworldly power. “Some mountains poured to the river in a liquid-seeming waste, the colour of sewage, while others showed crimson and incendiary beyond them, already daubed with snow.” (180)

As he continues, paranoia seems to shadow him and his informants. The Chinese fearful of SARS and foreign presences monitor him; the peoples resisting the Communists or the Taliban, the mullahs or the despotic regimes fear his entrance or take him aside as a confidant. Past the ancient divide of the River Oxus, He in Mazar-e-Sharif watches from a hotel window “the still city, which seemed to be glimmering under water. I felt a light expectancy. This, I thought idly, was how people died: by mistake, imagining themselves bodiless.” (221)

Such an existential unease grows as he enters Islamist territory. The Mongols left the places they conquered so ruined that even today, on this highway, forgetfulness appears to be the status quo, as it was for different ideologies but similar purposes under Stalin, Taliban, Mao, the Shah, and Khomeini. Nearing Iran: “For the last time I follow a track into a village and see again how people live. How a seven-year-drought is draining their fields, their crops, their lives. One quarter of their children never reaches the age of five. The average life ends at forty-three. Then all thoughts about brutality and conscience drain away, and the mystery becomes not cruelty, but compassion: why somebody offers a stranger a cigarette, or turns away from killing an enemy’s son.” (257)

In Tehran, he finds a clandestine humanism, but even a young filmmaker’s search for genuine roots withers. He and some friends went one winter to a village to collect picturesque stories and scenes. Thubron quotes him: “But we found those villages had no memories. No stories. There were no lullabies they sang their babies. The songs they sang were the same as ours.” (285) So, their film became: “About how there were no stories. How history had disappeared.”

Thubron composes his book filled with such vignettes. He tells many stories even as he shows us how history crumbles and ideology stifles imagination. His book will not be the romantic travelogue that his predecessors might have labored a century or two ago to concoct. It can depress, and we may be startled as the author is by his own mirrored reflection late on, hostile eyes, windburned face, dissheveled attire. He makes no easy end of his journey, and his honesty may wear him and us down, but he is faithful in this manner to telling us what he heard, saw, and felt all the long way from the eerie, policed fastnesses of inner Asia to the calmer, tired shores of ancient Antioch.

Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.) Overview

To travel the Silk Road, the greatest land route on earth, is to trace the passage not only of trade and armies but also of ideas, religions, and inventions. Making his way by local bus, truck, car, donkey cart, and camel, Colin Thubron covered some seven thousand miles in eight months—out of the heart of China into the mountains of Central Asia, across northern Afghanistan and the plains of Iran into Kurdish Turkey—and explored an ancient world in modern ferment.

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Backroads of the Texas Hill Country: Your Guide to the Most Scenic Adventures (Backroads of …)

August 11, 2010

Backroads of the Texas Hill Country: Your Guide to the Most Scenic Adventures (Backroads of …) Review


The Texas Hill Country has exerted a pull on my imagination for many years, in large measure because of LBJ’s dominating presence on the US political scene. Somehow it seemed unlikely that such a force would come from a hard scrabble area like this.

We were lucky enough to spend several days touring the area recently, and found many riches here, not only beautiful scenery (beautifully photographed in this fine guide), but filled with interesting history.

A few of our favorites, all well covered in this guide, include:

Wine. It’s rare that Texas wines are exported out of the state, even to the wine shops in New York City where it’s possible to buy almost anything. The Hill Country is said to be the fastest growing wine destination in the US (after Napa). A good supplement is Touring Texas Wineries: Scenic Drives to 27 Lone Star Vineyards and a good collection of wine related recipes appears in Texas Wineries: A Guide with Favorite Wineries’ Recipes [Revised].

Fredricksburg. This little town was established by German nobles in the 1800’s and there is still a strong Germanic influence. Fredericksburg, Texas: Living With the Past is a good supplement to the history of the place.

LBJ. Johnson City (not named for LBJ or his family) and the LBJ ranch are both fascinating stops. The electric company puts on a wonderful display of lights in late November and the history of Johnson’s era is well told at the ranch and the two parks.

This guide is a superb introduction to the region, and a useful memoir for the library chair back home. Well done!

Robert C. Ross 2009

Backroads of the Texas Hill Country: Your Guide to the Most Scenic Adventures (Backroads of …) Feature

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Backroads of the Texas Hill Country: Your Guide to the Most Scenic Adventures (Backroads of …) Overview

Texas has hill country?  Who knew?  Well, the Lonely Planet guide to Texas, which calls the Hill Country “rightfully one of the state’s biggest tourist draws . . . an area of gently rolling hills and valleys freckled with cacti and cattle ranches, lined with rivers and dotted with peaceful, picturesque little towns.”  And any self-respecting Texan might know as much.  Forty miles west of Austin and fifty north of San Antonio, the Hill Country is within an easy drive of two of the state’s biggest cities, putting back-country quiet and beauty within reach of countless urban dwellers seeking respite.

This book brings the remarkable Hill Country of Texas home to the back roads traveler.  Whether it’s wildflowers you’re drawn to, or dude ranches, natural areas, historic sites, or quaint Texas towns redolent of history, this is your passport to an experience like no other.  Backroads of the Texas Hill Country introduces travelers and armchair tourists alike to the emerging wine country of the Lone Star State, the meticulously preserved culture of East European immigrants, the “cowboy capital of the world” (Bandera), and the childhood home of LBJ at Johnson City.  Follow this irresistible guide into the Hill Country, and find yourself deep in the heart of Texas.

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Colombia (Country Guide)

August 9, 2010

Colombia (Country Guide) Review


Just got back from a trip from Colombia, and actually thought this was an above-average Lonely Planet. I’ve used LP more than I like to admit, and this one was actually one of my favorites. It was so positive on Colombia as a whole – Colombia has such a bad reputation within the US, and I found the LP”s overall country coverage to be so upbeat and positive that it rubbed off on me.

All of the below reviewers complain that this LP is a bad one. And perhaps it is a bit of out of date in some sections, or their coverage of other cities/destinations is off, but we actually didn’t experience either of these. Granted, we only really hit the more popular tourist destinations, so perhaps, the coverage was worse in other areas. But overall, I found it to be a great guide, with the only complaint that the destination coverage seemed a bit less detailed (less hotel, restaurant and nightlife recommendations per destinations) than it is for other countries, and we found the section on Parque Tayrona to make it sound far more confusing that it actually was. But nevertheless, I’d still recommend it. I’d be surprised if there are many guides that are better for Colombia.

Colombia (Country Guide) Feature

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Colombia (Country Guide) Overview

Lonely Planet knows Colombia. Whether you want to strill the cobbled streets of colonial Cartagena, bask on a dazzling Caribbean beach, sample some of the world’s finest java on a coffee plantation or show off your salsa moves at a packed Cali nightclub, our 5th edition takes you there.

Lonely Planet guides are written by experts who get to the heart of every destination they visit. This fully updated edition is packed with accurate, practical and honest advice, designed to give you the information you need to make the most of your trip.

In This Guide:

Dedicated Outdoors chapter with trekking, diving and paragliding
Sizzling nightlife and dining picks for Bogota, Medellin and Cali
Revealed: La Guajira, the Pacific Coast and other emerging hotspots

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Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan

August 9, 2010

Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan Review


This is a great book, i love it, the guy is to be respected and admired for all he went through and learned, no doubt. HOWEVER…early on in the book he describes one of his japanese co-workers named Hojo as having such a red nose riddled with spider veins that “he could have been Irish.” Uh…yeah, right. And Jews are all penny pinchers, blacks can all tap dance, mexicans are all lazy, puerto ricans all carry knives, the italians are all in the mafia…really, now how could you write that and how could the publishers let it slip by?

Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan Feature

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Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan Overview

From the only American journalist ever to have been admitted to the insular Tokyo Metropolitan Police press club: a unique, firsthand, revelatory look at Japanese culture from the underbelly up.

At nineteen, Jake Adelstein went to Japan in search of peace and tranquility. What he got was a life of crime . . . crime reporting, that is, at the prestigious Yomiuri Shinbun. For twelve years of eighty-hour workweeks, he covered the seedy side of Japan, where extortion, murder, human trafficking, and corruption are as familiar as ramen noodles and sake. But when his final scoop brought him face to face with Japan’s most infamous yakuza boss—and the threat of death for him and his family—Adelstein decided to step down . . . momentarily. Then, he fought back.

In Tokyo Vice, Adelstein tells the riveting, often humorous tale of his journey from an inexperienced cub reporter—who made rookie mistakes like getting into a martial-arts battle with a senior editor—to a daring, investigative journalist with a price on his head. With its vivid, visceral descriptions of crime in Japan and an exploration of the world of modern-day yakuza that even few Japanese ever see, Tokyo Vice is a fascination, and an education, from first to last.

Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan Specifications

A Q&A with Jake Adelstein

Question: What drew you to Japan in the first place, and how did you wind up going to university there?

Jake Adelstein: In high school I had many problems with anger and self-control. I had been studying Zen Buddhism and karate, and I thought Japan would be the perfect place to reinvent myself. It could be that my pointy right ear draws me toward neo-Vulcan pursuits–I don’t know.

When I got to Japan, I managed to find lodgings in a Soto Zen Buddhist temple where I lived for three years, attending zazen meditation at least once a week. I didn’t become enlightened, but I did get a better hold on myself.

Question: How did you become a journalist for the most popular Japanese-language newspaper?

Jake Adelstein: The Yomiuri Shinbun runs a standardized test, open to all college students. Many Japanese firms hire young grads this way. My friends thought that the idea of a white guy trying to pass a Japanese journalist’s exam was so impossibly quixotic that I wanted to prove them wrong. I spent an entire year eating instant ramen and studying. I managed to find the time to do it by quitting my job as an English teacher and working as a Swedish-massage therapist for three overworked Japanese women two days a week. It turned out to be a slightly sleazy gig, but it paid the bills.

There was a point when I was ready to give up studying and the application process. Then, when I was in Kabukicho on June 22, 1992, I asked a tarot fortune-telling machine for advice on my career path, and it said that with my overpowering morbid curiosity I was destined to become a journalist, a job at which I would flourish, and that fate would be on my side. I took that as a good sign. I still have the printout.

I did well enough on the initial exam to get to the interviews, and managed to stumble my way through that process and get hired. I think I was an experimental case that turned out reasonably well.

Question: How did you succeed in uncovering the underworld in a country that is famously “closed” or restricted to foreigners? Do you think people talked more openly to you because you were American?

Jake Adelstein: I think Japan is actually more open than people give it credit for. However, to get the door open, you really need to become fluent in the spoken and written language. The written language was a nightmare for me.

You’re right, though; it was mostly an advantage to be a foreigner–it made me memorable. The yakuza are outsiders in Japanese society, and perhaps being a fellow outsider gave us a weird kind of bond. The cops investigating the yakuza also tend to be oddballs. I was mentored into an early understanding and appreciation of the code of both the yakuza and the cops. Reciprocity and honor are essential components for both.

I also think the fact that I’m too stupid to be afraid when I should be, and annoyingly persistent as well–these things didn’t help me in long-term romance, but they helped me as a crime reporter.

Question: Do you feel that investigative journalism is being threatened or aided by the expansion of the Internet and news blogs, and the closing down of many printed newspapers?

Jake Adelstein: In one sense it is being threatened because investigative journalism is rarely a solo project. It requires huge amounts of resources, capital, and time to really do one story correctly. Legal costs and FOIA documents are expensive things. The bigger the target, the greater the risk and the more money is required. The second-biggest threat to investigative journalism is crooked lawyers and corporate shills who sue as a harassment tactic. In general, it’s rather hard and time-consuming to be an army of one. It took me almost three years to break the story about yakuza receiving liver transplants at UCLA on my own. The costs in financial terms were immense, and so were the losses along the way. A team of reporters could have done the work much faster, probably.

However, these things said, blogging is also a great source of news that might go unreported, or be overlooked, by the mainstream media. Twitter, too, has had an interesting impact, actually helping a journalist get out of jail in the case of James Karl Buck. We’re beginning to see kind of a public option in investigative journalism, too–such as things like ProPublica. They do an awesome job at investigative journalism, partly through donations, and they have a great web site. So the Internet is not all bad for investigative journalism, as long as we proceed with caution and forethought. At the same time, real intelligence-gathering work actually requires you to put down your cell phone and your computer and get off your ass and meet people in the real world. As odious as it may be, we have to sift through garbage, pound the pavement, and visit the scene of the crime. Not all answers can be found in front of a keyboard, or on Google, and the “it’s all in the database” mentality is the bane of reporting and often generates shoddy reporting.

The individual journalist can do great investigative work–it’s just a lot harder, and usually financially difficult to do unless you’re independently wealthy, like Bruce Wayne. Most of us don’t have the time or the resources or the luxury of holding down a day job and doing investigative journalism on the side, as a hobby.

Question: What do you hope your American audience can learn from your book?

Jake Adelstein: I think everyone will take away something different from the book. I suppose you can learn a lot about how journalism works in Japan, how the police work, and how the yakuza work. I would also hope that people take away from the book an understanding of some of the things I really like about Japan and the Japanese, things like reciprocity, honor, loyalty, and stoic suffering. I think in Japan, I learned how important it is to keep your word, to never forget your debts–and not just the financial ones–and to make repayment in due course. Perhaps that’s what honor is all about.

There’s a word in Japanese, hanmen kyoshi, which means, more or less, “the teacher who teaches by his bad example.” At times, I’m an excellent hanmen kyoshi in the book.

Everything I’ve learned that’s important to me is in the book somewhere. I hope there’s something universal in the contents beyond just making people aware of cultural differences between the United States and Japan, or reiterating the importance and value of investigative journalism. Like a book I would choose to read to my children, I hope there’s some kind of moral to it all. Maybe the real lesson is to be kind and helpful to the people you care about whenever you can, because it’s good for them, and good for you, and your time with them may be much shorter than you imagined.

(Photo © Michael Lionstar)

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