GOOD-BYE TO OLD PEKING: THE WARTIME LETTERS OF U.S.
MARINE CAPTAIN
JOHN SEYMOUR LETCHER, 1937-1939
Captain John Seymour Letcher USMC
Ohio University Press, 1998.
NEW, still in shrinkwrap. First Edition. 6.25x9.25. Blue pictorial dust jacket on dark green boards. Maps, photographs,
32 pages of notes, bibliography, index, 242 pp. "For two and a half years,
1937-1939, Captain John Seymour Letcher commanded a company of the US Embassy
Marine Guard in Peking. During that time, he wrote letters to his parents
in Virginia describing his experiences as a Westerner in the exotic imperial
city. His letters report the everyday rhythms of the military, familiar
to soldiers everywhere, and the challenges of life in pre-Communist China:
food, servants, coping with the biting cold of Peking winters or the torrid
heat of summertime. He details off-hours pastimes, the opportunities for
acquisitive Americans, and the intoxicating social schedule of the foreign
officials who served in Peking. But Captain Letcher also witnessed the
trauma of the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War. He saw Chinese troops
who had been slaughtered by Japanese invaders and the imperial city occupied.
And he relates the stirring story of the Chinese guerrillas rebounding
from devasting defeat to a position of control over much of the countryside
in North China. As noncombatants in the war, Captain Letcher and his family
were not involved in the conflict and were relatively safe. He was even
permitted to travel to Japanese-occupied Manchuria and west of Peking to
what is known today as Inner Mongolia. These letters home, written on the
eve of WWII, provide a unique record of an era largely overlooked by military
historians and modern China specialists." Currently in print at $36.95.
$36.95

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