Author unveils treasure trove of hidden stories about postwar Japan

Robert Whiting captures underworld figures, other colorful 'outsiders' of era

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American author Robert Whiting's latest book performs a valuable service by giving exuberant life to a neglected, underreported era in postwar Japan history. (Source photos Tuttle Publishing, Robert Whiting)

STEPHEN MANSFIELD, Contributing writer

In the introduction to his new book, author Robert Whiting focuses on a range of foreigners who he says have been "heretofore unknown or vastly underreported." He is right. How many people, even among well-versed readers of works on Japan, have heard of restaurateur Johnny Wetzstein, who offered all-American hamburgers and an upstairs room catering to more sensual appetites; the bellicose inebriate, Vladimir Granby Auscus, a yakuza-affiliated gangster and former White Russian; or Charles Kades, a high-ranking official in the U.S. Occupation hierarchy, who, while conducting postwar reforms under General MacArthur, was also conducting an affair with a married Japanese viscountess?

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