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(Paperback - Reprint)
Gavan Daws combined ten years of documentary research and hundreds of interviews with surrviving POWs to write this explosive, first-and-only account of the experiences of the Allied POWs of World War II. The Japanese Army took over 140,000 Allied prisoners, and one in four died the hands of their captors. Here Daws reveals the survivors' haunting experiences, from the atrocities perpetrated during the Bataan Death March and the building of the Burma-Siam railroad to descriptions of disease, torture, and execution.
From the atrocities of the Bataan death march to the hardships of the labor camps, this horrifying account of the treatment POWs endured at the hands of the Japanese during World War II explores the limits of the human spirit and the depths of inhumanity. 31 photos. 5 illustrations. Map. Notes.
Daws (Shoal of Time) eloquently tells the story of 140,000 Allied military prisoners whom history has almost forgotten. He convincingly describes Japanese POW camps not as homogenizing institutions but as tribal societies of Americans, British, Australians, Dutch-and Japanese. The Japanese showed no mercy to those who fell into their hands, the author stresses: Thousands were worked to death; as many more died of disease and starvation; others were beaten to death or beheaded, often so clumsily that two or three strokes were required to finish the job. Daws combines archival research and personal interviews to describe inmates who did what they had to do to survive and afterward tried to live with their guilt. Their experiences highlight the scale of human pain inflicted by Japan. Illustrations not seen by PW. (Nov.)
More Reviews and RecommendationsFor fifteen years, Daws headed historical research on the Pacific region at the Institute for Advanced Studies at the Australian National University. He also served as Pacific member to the UNESCO Commission on the Scientific and Cultural History of Humankind. The author of eight previous books, including the best-selling Shoal of Time, Daws has also won international awards for documentary films. He lives with his wife in Honolulu.
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July 25, 2008: My Father served in Service Battery, 131st Field Artillery. Reading Gavan Dawes' book was like listening to my Father recounting his experiences. Having attended a reunion with my Dad, I came to know some of the men he served with. They were HEROS to a man. Only those men who returned will EVER know the bond that bound them to one another, the courage and faith that enabled their repatriation, or the nation that forgot them.
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January 10, 2006: THIS IS AN EXCELLENT ACCOUNT OF JAPANESE ATROCITIES COMMITTED AGAINST ALLIED PRISONERS OF WAR. IT MADE MY BLOOD BOIL AND THE INHUMANE TREATMENT OF PRISONERS AND THE LACK OF ACCOUNTABLITIY AND JUSTICE AT THE END OF THE WAR. SIXTY YEARS ON NAZI WAR CRIMANALS ARE STILL BEING BROUGHT TO JUSTICE, YET NO ONE SEEKS JAPANESE WAR CRIMINALS. THE VOICES OF TENS OF THOUSANDS OF DEAD PRISONERS CRY OUT FOR JUSTICE.