Review:
..."makes a number of highly interesting points...information is woven nicely into the book, and has a great deal to say about the startling quality of Japanese wartime industry....The book is a moving picture of the patience of the Japanese in the face of adversity, but perhaps the most important, Zero Fighter is Japanese. It is not often that a Japanese book is encountered here that divulges intimate knowledge about such a fascinating subject. There is significant value in this as we enter an era in which the Japanese and American people must share and respect each other's cultural point of view."-Asian Reporter
"Yoshimura invented technohistory as a genre. In this work he deals with the development, production, and history of the Japanese World War II fighter...for all World War II and aviation collections."-Library Journal
"What readers will gain is not only a historical narrative but how the Japanese view their own technical achievements and limitations....The book is a fascinating read and discusses not only a fighter that would forever be tied to the attack on Pearl Harbor but also other innovations by the Nagoya Aircraft Works."-Great Lakes Bulletin
"Yoshimura fascinates when recounting how the U.S. ignored early warnings about the Zero from American pilot Claire Chennault, who encountered the remarkable dogfighter while flying for China. He also manages to impart suspense to the oft-told tale of Japan's surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, which occurred three years to the day before an earthquake ravaged the Nagoya Aircraft works, where the Zeros were built--an event that presages not only the end of the war but also the close of Yoshimura's knowledgeable history."-Publishers Weekly
?Yoshimura invented technohistory as a genre. In this work he deals with the development, production, and history of the Japanese World War II fighter...for all World War II and aviation collections.?-Library Journal
?What readers will gain is not only a historical narrative but how the Japanese view their own technical achievements and limitations....The book is a fascinating read and discusses not only a fighter that would forever be tied to the attack on Pearl Harbor but also other innovations by the Nagoya Aircraft Works.?-Great Lakes Bulletin
?Yoshimura fascinates when recounting how the U.S. ignored early warnings about the Zero from American pilot Claire Chennault, who encountered the remarkable dogfighter while flying for China. He also manages to impart suspense to the oft-told tale of Japan's surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, which occurred three years to the day before an earthquake ravaged the Nagoya Aircraft works, where the Zeros were built--an event that presages not only the end of the war but also the close of Yoshimura's knowledgeable history.?-Publishers Weekly
?...makes a number of highly interesting points...information is woven nicely into the book, and has a great deal to say about the startling quality of Japanese wartime industry....The book is a moving picture of the patience of the Japanese in the face of adversity, but perhaps the most important, Zero Fighter is Japanese. It is not often that a Japanese book is encountered here that divulges intimate knowledge about such a fascinating subject. There is significant value in this as we enter an era in which the Japanese and American people must share and respect each other's cultural point of view.?-Asian Reporter
.,."makes a number of highly interesting points...information is woven nicely into the book, and has a great deal to say about the startling quality of Japanese wartime industry....The book is a moving picture of the patience of the Japanese in the face of adversity, but perhaps the most important, Zero Fighter is Japanese. It is not often that a Japanese book is encountered here that divulges intimate knowledge about such a fascinating subject. There is significant value in this as we enter an era in which the Japanese and American people must share and respect each other's cultural point of view."-Asian Reporter
From the Back Cover:
Akira Yoshimura originally wrote Zero Fighter for the Japanese market, which is actually an interesting perspective for North American audiences to experience. For example, we are generally not aware of the success of the Zero fighter or of its significance in Japanese minds. Both the superiority of the aircraft in the early stages of the Pacific War and the great stature of Jiro Horikoshi as an aircraft designer (he is to Japan what the designer of the Spitfire is to the U.K.) will come as a revelation to most readers here. Also completely unknown to most North American readers is the story of the transport section at the Nagoya Aircraft Works. This information is woven nicely into the book, and has a great deal to say about the startling quality of Japanese wartime industry: rigid in many ways, while producing a plane of brilliant originality. The book is a moving picture of the patience of the Japanese in the face of adversity, but perhaps most important, Zero Fighter is Japanese. It is not often that a Japanese book is encountered here that divulges intimate knowledge about such a fascinating subject. There is significant value in this as we enter an era in which the Japanese and American people must share and respect the other's cultural point of view.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.