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Barefoot Gen 8:

Merchants of Death
Couverture
2 Avis
Last Gasp of San Francisco, 1 mars 2009 - 256 pages
Cartoonist Keiji Nakazawa was seven years old and living in Hiroshima in the early days of August 1945 when the city was destroyed by an atomic bomb dropped by the U.S.A. Starting a few months before that event, the ten-volume saga shows life in Japan after years of war and privations, as seen through the eyes of seven-year-old Gen Nakaoka. Volume Eight opens in 1950; Gen is now in middle school, where he meets both a progressive-minded schoolteacher at odds with his conservative superiors, and a brilliant but cynical classmate who challenges the teacher's -- and Gen's -- values at every turn. Gen also finds himself confronting the corrosive effects on postwar Hiroshima society of drugs and the arms industry. With the Korean War offering new business opportunities, a new generation of death merchants holds sway in Japan. Gen, his teacher mentor, and other peace-minded citizens are forced to struggle against red-baiting school officials, violent nationalists, and government censorship.

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Review: Barefoot Gen, Volume Eight: Merchants of Death (Barefoot Gen #8)

Avis d'utilisateur  - Susan Haines - Goodreads

I suppose it's hard to keep the series going through so many sequels. Both 7 and 8 seems very pedantic and even propaganda-ish; and even though I agree with the author's opinions, it takes away from the story to have characters on soapboxes so often. Consulter l'avis complet

Review: Barefoot Gen, Volume Eight: Merchants of Death (Barefoot Gen #8)

Avis d'utilisateur  - Melissa - Goodreads

I'm learning a lot about some of the politics of Japan and America in the process of reading this series. It's all rather disturbing. Consulter l'avis complet

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À propos de l'auteur (2009)

Keiji Nakazawa was seven years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on his hometown of Hiroshima. He lives in Tokyo.

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