Jenny Chan has 4 audiobooks on Listento.it, narrated by 4 narrators. The most-rated is Ishii Shiro.

4 audiobooks
Cover art for The Khabarovsk War Crimes Trial

The Khabarovsk War Crimes Trial

Summary

3,607 members of Unit 731, 12 brought to trial at Khabarovsk. Did justice ever prevail?  Although the west often dismissed the Khabarovsk War Crimes Trial as "Communist Propaganda", it was the first time the scientists from the "Epidemic Prevention and Water Purification Department" of the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) came forward with the crimes they committed during World War II.  The Khabarovsk War Crime Trials were hearings held between 25-31 December 1949 in the Soviet Union's Stalinist courts, and lasted for five days. It was after the 10-month long Nuremberg trials and the two-year-long Far Eastern War Crimes Tribunal in Tokyo. Although it was a shorter war crimes trial, it unearthed cruel biological weapon development and human experimentation practices by the Japanese Imperial Army.  This book is a short version of the full trial. It highlights the precise points of the testimonies as well as the proceedings.

©2020 Jenny Chan (P)2020 Pacific Atrocities Education

Narrator: Doug Greene
Author: Jenny Chan
Length: 1 hr and 16 mins
Available on Audible
Cover art for The Undrowning Lotus

The Undrowning Lotus

Summary

Based on a true story, The Undrowning Lotus centers on Chunhua who grew up during the opium crisis in Shanxi, located in Northern China. After being sold as a child bride, her feet were bounded by her in-laws, a popular practice in China at the time. She worked on the farm day and night while trying to find meaning in her life. As communism rose in China, she became a revolutionary. This allowed her to contribute to her country at a time of civil war in China. During the invasion of China by the Imperial Japanese Army, she was captured and put into sexual slavery known as comfort women station. According to Iris Chang, the author of The Rape of Nanking, these women were called "public toilets" by Japanese soldiers. This is a story of survival through the comfort woman station in Northern China, where our heroine escaped and was recaptured a couple of times before the war ended. This book features interviews from 2014 with Chinese comfort women from Shanxi before they passed away.

©2020 Pacific Atrocities Education (P)2020 Pacific Atrocities Education

Narrator: Suzie Yeung
Author: Jenny Chan
Length: 4 hrs and 5 mins
Available on Audible
Cover art for Memoir by Prince Konoe

Memoir by Prince Konoe

Summary

On December 16, 1945, Prince Konoe committed suicide after refusing to collaborate with US Army officer Bonner Fellers in Operation Blacklist. His refusal to exonerate Emperor Hirohito and the imperial family of war crimes responsibilities. A week before he took the cyanide, he wrote a memoir regarding his experience governing Imperial Japan during World War 2.  Although Prince Fumimaro Konoe was born into one of the most ancient and noble families of Japan and was a descendant of the Gosekke (fiver regent families), he faced poverty at 14 after his father passed away. He was then groomed by his uncle Prince Saionji Kinmochi, who was a prime minister at the time, for an essential role in government.  By 1937, Prince Konoe became the prime minister of Imperial Japan, during a time when Japan had occupied Manchuria. At the age of 46, Prince Konoe was the second youngest prime minister in Japan's history. During his first year of being a prime minister, the China Incident happened, and the Sino-Japanese War raged on.  The memoir shows many efforts of Prince Konoe's efforts for negotiations with Chinese and US government officials to try to end the war early as well as his governing during a time of crisis during the Pacific Asia War.  This audiobook includes: An introduction of the Imperial Japanese government A family tree of the Japanese royal families A biographical report of Prince Fumimaro Konoe by the Interim Research and Intelligence Service of the Research and Analysis Branch of the Department of State His translated memoir

©2020 Pacific Atrocities Education (P)2020 Pacific Atrocities Education

Narrator: David Pickering
Length: 2 hrs and 43 mins
Available on Audible
Cover art for Ishii Shiro

Ishii Shiro

Summary

During the Japanese occupation of Manchuria, it promised many opportunities for young scientists who want to utilize this colony. Ishii Shiro seized the occasion, and with funding from the War Ministry of Imperial Japan, he founded Unit 731, a biological and chemical warfare research and development unit. He recruited the brightest minds from Japan to conduct human experiments, developed bubonic plague bombs, and tested biological and chemical weapons.  Within a few years, he rapidly climbed the ranks, going from Captain to General for the Imperial Japanese Army. His impact and power overshadowed his European counterpart, Josef Mengele.  After the war, he faked his death, but the CIA was able to locate him. However, he negotiated immunity and was never brought to justice.   Ishii Shiro: Josef Mengele of the East is a biography based on declassified documents found in the National Archives and Records Administration. These are documents from the CIA, Far East Asia Command Center, U.S. Naval Operations, Khabavosk War Crimes Trial, and documents that survived by chance in Tokyo. 

©2020 Pacific Atrocities Education (P)2021 Pacific Atrocities Education

Narrator: Kristyn Mass
Author: Jenny Chan
Length: 1 hr and 12 mins
Available on Audible