Hirohito
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
Set during the final days of August 1945, this novel unfolds inside the sealed world of the Imperial Palace as the Japanese Empire approaches its irreversible end. Through a sequence of quiet, precise entries — each anchored to a single day — the narrative observes history not through battles or proclamations, but through silence, ritual, and the slow collapse of certainty.
While cities vanish, armies disintegrate, and the outside world becomes unrecognizable, the palace attempts to preserve order through protocol, routine, and language that no longer corresponds to reality. Reports arrive stripped of meaning, maps continue to show a country that no longer exists, and decisions gather weight long before they are spoken. At the center stands a figure treated as divine, confronted not with defeat alone, but with the necessity of choosing survival over myth.
Blending historical gravity with meditative prose, the novel explores the moment when power loses its foundation, when institutions outlive the world that justified them, and when a voice once believed eternal becomes human. It is not a story of war, but of the instant when war ceases to be comprehensible — and of what remains when a nation must continue after the collapse of its own idea of permanence.
Spare, atmospheric, and philosophical, this is a novel about the end of an empire, the transformation of a god into a man, and the fragile beginning of a world that must exist without both.