Steve Kemper

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Steve Kemper

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Steve Kemper is the author of Our Man in Tokyo, A Splendid Savage, A Labyrinth of Kingdoms, and Code Name Ginger. His work has appeared in many national publications, including Smithsonian and National Geographic. He lives in West Hartford, Connecticut.

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Steve Kemper If I'm having trouble writing, the cause is usually one of two things: either I'm bored and don't really want to do the work, or I don't yet know what…moreIf I'm having trouble writing, the cause is usually one of two things: either I'm bored and don't really want to do the work, or I don't yet know what I think and so I can't express anything clearly. Once I identify the cause, the solution is obvious. For boredom, bear down and finish. For uncertainty, do more research and thinking. (less)
Steve Kemper Curiosity + mortgage = inspiration.
Average rating: 4.23 · 1,681 ratings · 219 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Our Man in Tokyo: An Americ...

4.36 avg rating — 706 ratings — published 2022 — 8 editions
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A Splendid Savage: The Rest...

4.19 avg rating — 482 ratings — published 2016 — 7 editions
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A Labyrinth of Kingdoms: 10...

4.20 avg rating — 275 ratings — published 2012 — 4 editions
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Code Name Ginger: The Story...

3.88 avg rating — 204 ratings — published 2003 — 5 editions
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Reinventing the Wheel: A St...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 14 ratings
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Reinventing the Wheel : A S...

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National Geographic Mar 200...

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More books by Steve Kemper…

Honors

The Boston Globe has named  A Labyrinth of Kingdoms one of 2012′s best 11 books of nonfiction, putting it in some distinguished company. I’m honored.



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Published on January 16, 2013 13:39
Quotes by Steve Kemper  (?)
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“This was Grew’s usual practical plea not to kill off the good for the sake of the perfect.”
Steve Kemper, Our Man In Tokyo: An American Ambassador and the Countdown to Pearl Harbor

“Japanese paranoia stemmed partly from xenophobia rooted in racism. This combination wasn’t peculiar to Japan, as the Nazis were demonstrating in Germany. In the United States, the 1924 Exclusion Act remained in force, prohibiting all immigration from Asia. Some Western states didn’t think the Exclusion Act went far enough, because it hadn’t gotten rid of the Japanese who had immigrated before the United States slammed the door. Xenophobes argued that these immigrants were now breeding more Japanese, who were recognized, outrageously, as American citizens under the Fourteenth Amendment. Farmers in California and Arizona were especially hostile. Even before the Exclusion Act, these states had passed Alien Land Laws severely restricting the property rights of Japanese. Then in 1934 a group of farmers in Arizona’s Salt River Valley began agitating to kick Japanese farmers out, alleging that they had flooded into the region and were depriving farmland from deserving whites who were already hurting from the Depression. They also demanded that white landowners stop leasing acreage to Japanese farmers. The white farmers and their supporters held rallies and parades, blaring their message of exclusion. In the fall of that year, night riders began a campaign of terrorism. They dynamited irrigation canals used by Japanese farmers and threw dynamite bombs at their homes and barns. The leaders of the Japanese community tried to point out that only 700 Japanese lived in the valley and most had been there for more than twenty years. Three hundred fifty of them were American citizens, and only 125 worked in agriculture, mostly for American farmers. Facts made no impression on the white farmers’ racist resentments. Some local officials exploited the bigotry for political gain. The Japanese government protested all this. Hull didn’t want a few farmers to cause an international incident and pushed the governor of Arizona to fix the problem. The governor blamed the terrorism on communist agitators. Dynamite bombs continued to explode on Japanese farms through the fall of 1934. The local and state police maintained a perfect record—not a single arrest. In early February 1935 the Arizona legislature began considering a bill that would forbid Japanese immigrants from owning or leasing land. If they managed to grow anything, it could be confiscated. Any white farmer who leased to a Japanese would be abetting a crime. (Japan had similar laws against foreigners owning farmland.) American leaders and newspapers quickly condemned the proposed law as shameful, but farmers in Arizona remained enthusiastic. Japanese papers covered the controversy as well. One fascist group, wearing uniforms featuring skulls and waving a big skull flag, protested several times at the US embassy in Tokyo. Patriotic societies began pressuring Hirota to stand up for Japan’s honor. He and Japan’s representatives in Washington asked the American government to do something. Arizona politicians got word that if the bill passed, millions of dollars in New Deal money might go elsewhere. Nevertheless, on March 19 the Arizona senate passed the bill. On March 21 the state house of representatives, inspired more by fears of evaporating federal aid than by racial tolerance, let the bill die. The incident left a bad taste all around.”
Steve Kemper, Our Man In Tokyo: An American Ambassador and the Countdown to Pearl Harbor

“His new reading also included Sinclair Lewis’s 1935 novel It Can’t Happen Here, about a fascistic demagogue who gets elected president on a platform of fear, resentment, nationalism, and a promise to make America great again. “A”
Steve Kemper, Our Man In Tokyo: An American Ambassador and the Countdown to Pearl Harbor

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