"Far exceeds the expectations for ‘reference works’ in the sophistication of its historical argumentation. . . . For anyone considering the historiography of Japan’s road to war in the 1930s, Drea’s work will become required reading."—Historian
"An impressive and important piece of scholarship that addresses the first modern U.S. enemy to institutionalize suicide tactics as a mechanism to exhaust the will of the American people and to obtain a less-severe peace. . . . Highly recommended for command and staff students, undergraduate survey courses on modern Japan, and anyone interested in the pathology of militarism and how it can derail national policymaking."—Military Review
"This is the perfect meeting of author and subject: Edward J. Drea, the preeminent American authority on the Japanese Imperial Army, provides what is by far the most incisive English-language examination of that force. Drawing upon decades of his own work and recent Japanese scholarship, he dissects the tortured history of an institution that evolved from servant to master of an emerging modern Japan. . . . What Drea delivers is an intricate institutional history of clashing visions embodied by an array of diverse personalities. . . . In short, Drea’s rich book is not just a brilliant piece of military history; it is of enduring value for understanding Japan’s modern history."—World War II
"A magisterial inside history of the army. Edward Drea explains in language easily accessible to scholars, students, or general readers, and always maintaining a sure balance between detail and analysis, the army’s institutions, personalities, policies, strategy and tactics, its values in peace and its performance in battle, its relation to the emperor and the public, the education and training of its officers, as well as the conscription system and life in the barracks. . . . Anyone wishing to understand the Japanese army, or simply with an interest in following the entire life course of a nation’s army, should read this outstanding (and handsomely produced) book: I have seen nothing to rival it for authority, comprehensiveness, and readability, either in English or Japanese."—Journal of Military History
"This publication is meaningful as the first English-language source to analyze [many topics] from a Western viewpoint. Highly recommended."—Choice
“A persuasive, well balanced, and readable history that makes an important contribution to understanding not only prewar and wartime Japanese militarism but also its residues since the war.”—Akira Iriye, author of Power and Culture: The Japanese-American War, 1941–1945
“A sweeping survey, written in a forceful yet simple style, that will become the standard reference work in English for years to come.”—Theodore F. Cook, coauthor of Japan at War: An Oral History
“Drea deserves his place as the chronicler and analyst of one of the most feared military forces of modern times.”—Mark R. Peattie, author of Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power
“An impressive synthesis of the best Japanese and western scholarship on the Imperial Army over the past half century, Drea’s survey, from the army’s controversial origins to its gripping demise, will be indispensable to students of modern militaries and Imperial Japan alike.”—Michael A. Barnhart, author of Japan Prepares for Total War: The Search for Economic Security, 1919–1941
“Drea’s fluency in Japanese, enabling him to tap original Japanese-language sources to a far greater extent than any other Western writer on the subject, makes this impressive book a unique work of lasting value.”—Stanley L. Falk, former Chief Historian, U.S. Air Force, and author of Bataan: The March of Death
“Destined to be the standard volume on the history of the Imperial Japanese army for generations of scholars and students to come.”—Roger Jeans, author of Democracy and Socialism in Republican China