
Not surprisingly, United States of Japan is a best-seller in Japan, although Japan is a peace-loving nation (at the Peace Park Memorial in Hiroshima, you are immediately asked to sign a petition to ban nuclear weapons upon entrance). There are numerous glowing reviews of this book. I finished reading the book a few months ago, and although I'm not sure what I can add to this collection, I'm quite overdue to post something; the author has been remarkably patient with me!
Here is a very brief synopsis of the book, followed by my thoughts.
United States of Japan (USJ) is a successor to Phillip K. Dick's classic novel, The Man in the High Castle (1962). USJ begins in 1948, and takes place in (various parts of) California, which is controlled by Japan. After a few chapters we jump ahead forty years, to 1988. Americans seem to worship their Emperor, although a group of rebels called the George Washingtons are fighting for their freedom. They distribute an illegal video game that asks players to imagine what the world would be like if the USA had won the war, instead of Japan. Captain Beniko Ishimura's formidable task is to censor these video games, and to solve the mysteries of the revolutionaries, with the help of Akiko Tsukino.
This book kicked me out of my comfort zone. Way, way, way out! Although I've read many fictional war stories, from the very first chapter, this book is notably brutal and violent at times. Peter (yes, we're on an informal, first name basis; I've read and reviewed a lot of his work over the past few years) did warn me about the level of violence in this book a while ago. Still, it was definitely disturbing. Secondly, I've read some science fiction (such as by Ray Bradbury), but I've not read The Man in the High Castle by Philip B. Dick. I've now at least read about it, and have learned that there's a 2015 TV series based on it. USJ focuses on video games, and I must admit that I'm not a gamer; in fact, I've never played a video game (I do love to play Words with Friends on my phone). In spite of all of this, USJ is fantastic, imaginative, and brilliant. This exciting, fast-paced book held my attention at all times, and I think it would make an incredible movie. It's a hard book to classify. It's definitely multi-genre. It could be described in many ways, as listed below.
Mystery
PSYCHO THRILLER
(Qu'est-ce que c'est?)
(Qu'est-ce que c'est?)
Science Fiction
TECHNO THRILLER
TECHNO THRILLER
War Fiction
and more
and more
While I was thinking about my review post for USJ, I emailed a question to Peter.
If you could add, or subtract, one thing from USJ, what would it be and why?
PT: If I were to add one thing, it would be that since I've written the next book in the USJ universe (it's a standalone novel and not a direct sequel), I know so much more about the world and I'd like to plug some of that information back in, especially related to the mechas and their history.
If I were to subtract? I would probably modify the dream sequences the characters have to make it a little more clear that this is the replacement for the I Ching from The Man in the High Castle and is meant to be symbolic of the subconsciousness connection to our own world.
Thank you, Peter, for your thoughtful responses, for the photo above of you and your wife, Angela, at an E3 with a Persona character, and for your tremendous patience. I'm thrilled that you have written a new book, and look forward to reading it!
Your comments are welcomed, as always. Thanks for reading!