MacKenzie, Angus.
A posthumously published classic study of numerous U.S. government campaigns to suppress controversial ideas and information within the United States.
Schlesinger, Stephen, and Stephen Kinzer. Bitter Fruit:
The best book on America’s repression of a poor Central American country. The 1999 edition includes a foreword by Richard Nuccio, the former State Department official who sacrificed his career to help expose the cover-up of the C.I.A.’s involvement in the murder of an American citizen in Guatemala.
Japan
Arase, David.
This is the best analysis of Japan’s foreign policy and how it uses its wealth to achieve its objectives.
Dower, John.
The single most important book on the critical years of the Allied occupation, when the United States forged and Japan accepted its postwar status as America’s most valuable satellite.
Hall, Ivan P.
The most serious study by a genuine “Japan hand” of why the assumptions of political and economic convergence between Japan and the United States are nonsense. A graceful, well-written statement of what a foreigner must know if he or she plans to deal with Japan.
http://www.jpri.org/
Web site of the Japan Policy Research Institute. Contains over a hundred research reports, including papers on Japan’s discrimination against foreigners teaching in its universities, the problems of Okinawa, and Japan’s industrial policies, among many different subjects.
McVeigh, Brian J.
An anthropologist analyzes the bureaucratization of Japanese life and offers an exciting essay on why Japanese politics will never resemble American politics.
Schaller, Michael.
Diplomatic history at its best by a seasoned hand. Includes details on the decisions by Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson to give secret financial help to Japan’s conservative politicians.
Smith, Patrick.
For readers looking for an introduction to Japan, this is the best there is. Smith takes Japanese culture seriously. A beautifully written book.
Korea
Amsden, Alice.
The classic study of how South Korea got rich and the crisis it caused for orthodox American economic theory.
Bandow, Doug.
A prescient analysis by a former special assistant to President Reagan on why we have stayed too long in Korea and what we ought to do about it.
Cumings, Bruce.
A tour de force on the era in Korean history that Americans know nothing about and would prefer to ignore: 1945 to 1950. Cumings’s meticulous research has altered the “received wisdom” on the Korean War.
Hart-Landsberg, Martin.
An excellent, evenhanded account of why Korea remains divided. Includes chapters on the relevance of the German experience of reunification to Korea.
http://www.kimsoft.com/korea.htm
The indispensable Web site for materials on the role of the United States in Korea, including archives on the Cheju uprising of 1948 and Tim Shorrock’s U.S. government documents on the Kwangju massacre, which he obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.
Lee, Jae-eui.