The Teahouse of The August Moon by Vern Sneider is set
in 1945, and the Occupation of Okinawa. Colonel Wainright Purdy is the
commanding officer at headquarters section of Military Government Camp Team
C-147 Okinawa, bivouacked in the emerald-green hills between native villages
Goya and ancient castle Nakagusuka. He has officers assigned to all the small
villages on Okinawa under his command, and they are given orders to supervise
the villages. But one of those officers doesn’t seem to be pulling his load.
Captain Jeff Fisby oversees Tobiki village, but it appears he has lost control.
An elderly gentleman gives him the gift of two Geishas, and they turn the
village upside down as they talk the commander into letting them build a
teahouse to entertain the village. Colonel Purdy sends a doctor to Tobiki to
evaluate Captain Fisby, but the doctor also falls under the spell of the
village. There are lots of pulp magazines and comic books around for the men to
read, and the colonel especially like ADVENTURE; this will have a bearing on
the story. This is a hilarious novel of what can go wrong when America attempts
to change the ways of native people in foreign lands. The author was actually
the commander of Tobaru village, the model for Tobiki village in the story in
1945, so had first hand experience in the Occupation of Okinawa.
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