Retribution: The Battle for Japan, 1944-45 by Max Hastings

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: March 2009
  • 688pp
  • Sales Rank: 39,134

    Reader Rating: (9 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2009
    • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 688pp
    • Sales Rank: 39,134

    Synopsis

    Hailed in Britain as “Spectacular . . . Searingly powerful” (Andrew Roberts, The Sunday Telegraph), a riveting, impeccably informed chronicle of the final year of the Pacific war. In his critically acclaimed Armageddon, Hastings detailed the last twelve months of the struggle for Germany. Here, in what can be considered a companion volume, he covers the horrific story of the war against Japan.

    By the summer of 1944 it was clear that Japan’s defeat was inevitable, but how the drive to victory would be achieved remained to be seen. The ensuing drama—that ended in Japan’s utter devastation—was acted out across the vast stage of Asia, with massive clashes of naval and air forces, fighting through jungles, and barbarities by an apparently incomprehensible foe. In recounting the saga of this time and place, Max Hastings gives us incisive portraits of the theater’s key figures—MacArthur, Nimitz, Mountbatten, Chiang Kai-shek, Mao, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin. But he is equally adept in his portrayals of the ordinary soldiers and sailors—American, British, Russian, Chinese, and Japanese—caught in some of the war’s bloodiest campaigns.

    With unprecedented insight, Hastings discusses Japan’s war against China, now all but forgotten in the West, MacArthur’s follies in the Philippines, the Marines at Iwo Jima and Okinawa, and the Soviet blitzkrieg in Manchuria. He analyzes the decision-making process that led to the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki—which, he convincingly argues, ultimately saved lives. Finally, he delves into the Japanese wartime mind-set, which caused an otherwisecivilized society to carry out atrocities that haunt the nation to this day.

    Retribution is a brilliant telling of an epic conflict from a master military historian at the height of his powers.

    The Washington Post - Kai Bird

    In Retribution, Hastings does not leave out the big actors, but what is new and original are the personal stories he has extracted from oral histories and his own interviews with veterans of the American, Japanese, Russian, Australian and even Chinese armies. A fine writer, Hastings conveys many heartrending testimonies.

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    Biography

    Max Hastings is the author of more than fifteen books. He has served as a foreign correspondent and as the editor of Britain’s Evening Standard and The Daily Telegraph and has received numerous British Press Awards, including Journalist of the Year in 1982, and Editor of the Year in 1988. He lives outside London.

    Customer Reviews

    An excellent surveyby collinus

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    August 25, 2009: Retribution is the first book I have read by Max Hastings, and I highly recommend it. It is an impressive work that provides a balanced account of the events and people involved in all the theaters of the Pacific War in 1944 and 1945, including many areas often neglected, e.g., China and Burma. Hastings writes well and clearly -- though, as another reviewer has noted, he chooses some odd words at times -- and he never seems shy about voicing his opinion either of the those who fought the war or of later historians who judge the way the war was fought.

    As broad as the scope of his narrative is, it is also quite deep. He not only discusses and evaluates the famous leaders -- MacArthur, Stalin, Mao, Nimitz, and dozens of others -- but also spends time with many of the individual soldiers, sailors, airmen, and prisoners of war on both sides. He quotes often and extensively from their firsthand accounts and memories, which gives their stories an immediacy and emotional impact it could not have otherwise. What they went through, what they did, what they felt, are by turns breathtaking, horrifying, inspiring.

    In the end it is this breadth and depth that make this book so good and worth reading. Others have written and will write again that, for example, it was wrong or right to drop the atomic bombs; others have criticized MacArthur or praised him. Those arguments are nothing new and will never be settled. Hastings has his opinions on the bomb and MacArthur, too. They will not be what I remember from this book. I will remember what I learned about the size of the war in China and Burma, and what I learned about the people who fought the war and how they felt about what they did and saw. This is a good book.

    Great overview of the final year in the Pacificby Anonymous

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    July 17, 2008: Retribution is a history of the last year of the war in the Pacific. Hastings is British and right from the beginning his English writing style is on prominent display -- early on he actually writes that a British soldier ?smote? a Japanese soldier!! On the positive side, Hastings provides fairly comprehensive coverage of the land and sea battles from both sides? perspective without delving too far into the details of any single battle. He describes the personalities of the military and civilian leaders and how their personal foibles shaped their respective forces? strategies (he is far and away particularly critical of MacArthur?s military leadership). Above all, I was most impressed with his effort to remain objective throughout the book. He constantly challenges those who have had the hindsight of fifty plus years to question allied actions and never excuses Japanese or Russian barbarity. While it is clear that he does accept that some American and British actions were arguably barbaric (but almost inevitable), he points out, for example, that there really wasn`t any difference between the destruction that resulted from fire bombing and atomic bombing. On the negative side, Hastings largely ignores the battles in the air unless it involved US Navy aircraft or Army Air Corp B-29`s. But the most important negative of the book is his confusing conclusion that the Japanese would have surrendered regardless of many of the allied actions (such as the invasion of the Philippines or the dropping of the atomic bombs). On one hand he recognizes that allied leaders did not have the luxury of knowing whether the Japanese were on the verge of collapse, but on the other, he asserts that surrender would have occurred at roughly the same time due to the country?s rate of logistical strangulation. This is difficult to accept when Hastings provides example after example of both Japanese military and civilian intransigence. Still, this is a very good book and I recommend it to anyone that wishes to gain a general level of knowledge about the closing phase of the war.


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