'Masako Hattori blends the histories of youth, education, and national security to tell a bigger story about the varied and profound impacts of world wars on American society. She even takes us to postwar Japan, offering a fascinating and original comparative of how young people on opposing sides of the war experienced its end. Most of all, this study invites us to ponder anew an uncomfortable but resilient belief in American culture: that war abroad can foster social reform at home.' Laura McEnaney, author of Postwar: Waging Peace in Chicago