"This is a riveting tale of survival and transcendence. I could not put it down." -- Ken Burns, Filmmaker
AFTER THE JAPANESE EMPIRE COLLAPSED OVERNIGHT, CIVILIANS WERE ABANDONED TO FIGHT FOR THEIR LIVES
When Soviet forces stormed into Manchuria at the end of World War II, a young mother was left alone with her small children in a world suddenly filled with terror and uncertainty. In her fight for survival in the face of hunger, disease, violence, and bitter cold, she became a strong, independent woman determined to keep her children alive.
Drawing on her mother’s memoir, Kay Enokido vividly portrays the relentless dangers civilians endured as Japan’s Manchurian puppet state disappeared overnight. Weaving in the accounts of fellow survivors, she brings depth and perspective to a turbulent chapter of history little known in the West.
Phantom Paradise blends one family’s survival story with the wider sweep of political and historical events. It is both gripping and deeply personal—a testament to resilience in the face of chaos, and a powerful reminder that the true cost of war is ultimately borne by ordinary people.
I read this in one night and a morning. Really couldn't put it down. Kay's investigation of her childhood was compelling but the transformation she made to her own life was even more riveting. I've spent a little time in Japan, enough to know that the culture is very different from the US or Europe. Kay, AND her Mom, had to learn to navigate a totally different world after the war and in Kay's case, to live an entirely different way in the US. When you start the book, she's a child in occupied Manchuria. I won't tell you the end, but she now lives near me. You will cry at some parts and really appreciate the bonds of family, no matter how they are expressed. This is an excellent book, even better because it's real. They say everyone has a story. I'm really glad that Kay wrote hers.
This is a great read about a Japanese family during and after World War II - filled with danger, history, culture, tragedy and triumph. It is the author's memoir of growing up in war-torn Japan, but includes fascinating excerpts from her parents' journals and letters. The mother escaped from Manchuria with three very young children, while the father was a POW in a Siberian labor camp. It's a book you will remember.