In what was by all appearances a relatively short life, Amedee Baillot de Guerville was by turns an instructor of French at a women's college, a newspaper and magazine owner and editor,
Honorary Commissioner for the World's Columbian Exhibition, popular lecturer, war correspondent, author, and general "globe-trotter." Immigrating to the United States as a very young man in the
1880s, de Guerville gained his widest fame as a New York based correspondent and lecturer in the 1890s, before returning to his native France in 1898. In Au Japon (1904), de Guerville recounts
with mostly comical gaze - and perhaps a touch of imagination - his experiences in the Far East during the years 1892 and 1894. As the author himself confesses, "each of us sees things in our
own way." After a century, that of Monsieur de Guerville is worth rediscovering.