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A review by scribepub
Travels in Atomic Sunshine: Australia and the Occupation of Japan by Robin Gerster
Drawing extensively on diary entries, papers and personal interviews with Australian soldiers, Gerster paints an intricate portrait of the moral and cultural disorientation felt by the Aussie ‘conquerors’ as they came to terms with not only an enemy decimated by atomic horror but also their own inherent prejudices ... the book is an immense achievement of research and a timely reminder of the tightrope balance of foreign occupation, a message that has particular relevance in today’s post-9/11 climate. It will be particularly popular among avid history readers looking for a new angle on the wartime Australian experience.
Bookseller+Publisher
Robin Gerster is a superb writer and in his hands the numerous anecdotes, incidents and details of the occupation gleaned from extensive combing of archives, newspapers, diaries and novels come to life. In lesser hands, the wealth of individual observations might weigh down the narrative, but one of the strengths of Atomic Sunshine is its concentration on personal encounters and perceptions.
Jeff Kingston, Japan Times
An excellent book, vividly describing a little known episode of Australian history.
Peter Beale, Newcastle Herald
Elegant and sardonic history ...
Hamish McDonald, Sydney Morning Herald
This troubling, significant book offers us a crucible of what Australians can be like in victory over a justly hated enemy.
Barry Hill, The Age
... A well-written and highly readable account of an interesting episode in Australian history and a valuable addition to the growing literature on the history of Australia's relations with Asia.
The International History Review
Gerster, who draws on a rich supply of sources, tells an absorbing story of two nations in a state of change.
Lucy Sussex, The Sunday Age
Gerster’s Travels in Atomic Sunshine is a scholarly, superbly documented study and a narrative written in a highly readable style. It incorporates provocative arguments and sophisticated insights without becoming ‘academic’. It is a book that is bound to become a classic social history of a major era of the Australian-Japanese postwar encounter.
David Palmer, Transnational Literature
In a rich meeting of history and literature, Gerster explores the big issues of race, culture, and national identity as victor and vanquished meet in the aftermath of a world war. The love, betrayal, greed, generosity, compassion, and casual brutality of individuals are his evidence and the strength of his narrative.
Hank Nelson
Robin Gerster’s brilliant account of the little-known story of Australia’s occupation force provides new, and often unsettling, insights into Australian responses to Japan and the Japanese at the end of the Second World War. Amid the atomic wasteland of Hiroshima, Australians and Japanese fraternized across the barriers of language, history, and different wartime experiences. Gerster’s evocative cultural history of Australian–Japanese relations is as hard-hitting as it is perceptive.
Kate Darian-Smith
Gerster has a fascinating story to tell and he has done so in a lively and compelling narrative way that makes Travels in Atomic Sunshine accessible to readers well beyond the historical profession.
Judges’ comments from the 2009 NSW Premier’s History Awards
This is a fascinating study of cross-cultural contact and the ways that World War 2 changed the attitudes of many Australians ... Of particular note is Gerster’s nuanced and careful analysis of fiction and memoir, which allows a candour and intimacy not always accessible in other sources.
Judges’ comments from the Prime Minister’s Prize for Australian History
Bookseller+Publisher
Robin Gerster is a superb writer and in his hands the numerous anecdotes, incidents and details of the occupation gleaned from extensive combing of archives, newspapers, diaries and novels come to life. In lesser hands, the wealth of individual observations might weigh down the narrative, but one of the strengths of Atomic Sunshine is its concentration on personal encounters and perceptions.
Jeff Kingston, Japan Times
An excellent book, vividly describing a little known episode of Australian history.
Peter Beale, Newcastle Herald
Elegant and sardonic history ...
Hamish McDonald, Sydney Morning Herald
This troubling, significant book offers us a crucible of what Australians can be like in victory over a justly hated enemy.
Barry Hill, The Age
... A well-written and highly readable account of an interesting episode in Australian history and a valuable addition to the growing literature on the history of Australia's relations with Asia.
The International History Review
Gerster, who draws on a rich supply of sources, tells an absorbing story of two nations in a state of change.
Lucy Sussex, The Sunday Age
Gerster’s Travels in Atomic Sunshine is a scholarly, superbly documented study and a narrative written in a highly readable style. It incorporates provocative arguments and sophisticated insights without becoming ‘academic’. It is a book that is bound to become a classic social history of a major era of the Australian-Japanese postwar encounter.
David Palmer, Transnational Literature
In a rich meeting of history and literature, Gerster explores the big issues of race, culture, and national identity as victor and vanquished meet in the aftermath of a world war. The love, betrayal, greed, generosity, compassion, and casual brutality of individuals are his evidence and the strength of his narrative.
Hank Nelson
Robin Gerster’s brilliant account of the little-known story of Australia’s occupation force provides new, and often unsettling, insights into Australian responses to Japan and the Japanese at the end of the Second World War. Amid the atomic wasteland of Hiroshima, Australians and Japanese fraternized across the barriers of language, history, and different wartime experiences. Gerster’s evocative cultural history of Australian–Japanese relations is as hard-hitting as it is perceptive.
Kate Darian-Smith
Gerster has a fascinating story to tell and he has done so in a lively and compelling narrative way that makes Travels in Atomic Sunshine accessible to readers well beyond the historical profession.
Judges’ comments from the 2009 NSW Premier’s History Awards
This is a fascinating study of cross-cultural contact and the ways that World War 2 changed the attitudes of many Australians ... Of particular note is Gerster’s nuanced and careful analysis of fiction and memoir, which allows a candour and intimacy not always accessible in other sources.
Judges’ comments from the Prime Minister’s Prize for Australian History