Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and Its Aftermath by Michael Norman, Elizabeth M. Norman

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: June 2009
  • 480pp
  • Sales Rank: 607
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: June 2009
    • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
    • Format: Hardcover, 480pp
    • Sales Rank: 607

    Synopsis

    In the tradition of All Quiet on the Western Front and Hiroshima, this major new work about World War II exposes the myths of military heroism as shallow and inadequate, and makes clear that war causes suffering for people on all sides.

    The New York Times - Dwight Garner

    …stirring and humane …Tears in the Darkness is authoritative history. Ten years in the making, it is based on hundreds of interviews with American, Filipino and Japanese combatants. But it is also a narrative achievement. The book seamlessly blends a wide-angle view with the stories of many individual participants. And at this book's beating emotional heart is the tale of just one American soldier, a young cowboy and aspiring artist out of Montana named Ben Steele.

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    Biography

    MICHAEL NORMAN, a former reporter for The New York Times, teaches narrative journalism at New York University.

    ELIZABETH M. NORMAN, the author of two books about war, teaches at New York University’s Steinhardt School of Education.

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    Customer Reviews

    WWII brutal Bataan Death March through those that lived itby CBH

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    November 11, 2009: The "Bataan Death March" during WWII in the Philippines was one of the most deadly and brutal excursions mandated by any enemy. The Japanese captured this area shortly after the beginning of WWII, which started when Japan destroyed Pearl Harbor in the Pacific. This scenario is captured through the eyes of those that lived it and the records they had kept. The writings or diaries that these men, mostly from the United States and the Philippines, wrote and managed to hide somewhere or wrote after their rescue after a harrowing ordeal that killed so many. The map included in the beginning of the book shows the Luzon Island, Manila, Bataan, and surrounding areas. All of this area was where most of this story occurred.

    The attack on Pearl Harbor is described through both the American and the Japanese eyes and minds. Ben Steele was a young cowboy from Montana who rushed to join the Air Force once the war had begun. Being a country boy he wasn't used to war or people that acted much different than his wild western style. The story tells a bit of training then moves rapidly to the Philippines where Ben and his units were sent to defend an area that had many Philippine and American soldiers, along with some other nations. The military leaders felt there was plenty of military in the area to repel any Japanese attack attempting to take the entire area. They were dead wrong. Some of the natives took off for the hills of the island but most stayed and fought the oncoming enemy that sent unending lines of men to attack and capture all they could. Many on both sides were killed, but eventually the Japanese did overtake the entire island, making the forces fighting surrender to the Japanese.

    Eventually the men were herded in lines as the victors moved inland and north and forced to march regardless of physical condition, without food and water for the most part. If they fell or faltered for any reason, they were bayoneted or shot with their bodies thrown off the dirty, bumpy road. The description of what they endured as seen through Ben Steele's eyes and many others, officers and enlisted men alike, was in most cases beyond human comprehension. When they did get something thrown at them to eat it was usually leftovers from the Japanese meals, bits and pieces of rice, moldy, maggot filled, flies included along with any foreign substances that would come from the dirt. Water was almost non-existent even though there were areas along the way that contained wells or cisterns but the prisoners were not allowed to drink. A few managed to secretly obtain some water but all it did was give dysentery even worse than the food did.

    You have to read this story to understand what our military endured, if they lived through it, which many didn't. The Japanese would stop the march, separate lines of men, march them in small groups to the edge of a ravine, then bayonet them until they fell into the ravine dead or mostly dead. Very few did survive this method of killing. When the few that did survive arrived at Camp O'Donnell, they again were kept in very primitive enclosures and given very little to eat or drink.

    Eventually over the many months as prisoners, the Japanese knew they were losing the war and they pulled back or were killed or taken prisoner, allowing the ravaged men to roam the camp until friendly forces rescued them. For most of the men that did survive this tortuous trek their physical and...

    The story of the Bataan Death March and its aftermath.by Ductor

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    September 26, 2009: We all think we know what the Japanese did to our POWs in the South Pacific during WWII. A beating here, an atrocity there . But now, Elizabeth and Michael Norman can take you step by grisly step from the arrival of GI's on the Filipino shore, to their ultimate repatriation at the end of the war.

    This book is not for sissies. You have to take on the chin the fact that 46000 Japanese fought 130000 American and Filipino troops, and 76,000 of them surrendered. The largest single defeat in American military history. Add to this the ineptitude and flat-out incompetence of their higher command, and you have a disaster of epic proportions.

    But 'Tears in the Darkness' is not an analysis of failure, it is a chronicle of courage over adversity. It is a harrowing account of the treatment of American soldiers at the hands of their captors after their defeat.

    The husband and wife authors are uniquely qualified to write this book. Elizabeth Norman has already written of the plight of non-combatants in the South Pacific, and her husband Michael has written about men in combat from personal experience.

    The plight of POW's in the hands of the Japanese is a very difficult subject to write about effectively. Not least because of the way the Japanese treat each other and the prisoners in their care, is so unspeakable as to be almost unbelievable. It is difficult therefore to describe on page after page atrocious activities without blurring the enormity of the offense. The Normans however succeed admirably. Their prose is elegant and eschews sensation. They are scrupulously fair to all sides, save for an unnecessary deprecation of the Brits towards the end of the work (page 320). It baffled me how the authors could indulge in a detailed love-fest with General Masaharu Homma who was the ranking commander during the abuses (and was executed for it), while deprecating the Brits who, after all, were victims too.

    However, this lapse into Anglophobia does not detract from what is a beautifully constructed work of history and human endeavor. The authors brilliantly hang the historiography onto a detailed biography of Ben Steel: an American titan who endured the dreadful experience from start to finish, and lived (and I hope still lives), to tell the tale.

    I know that this is a hackneyed phrase; but it is important that everyone reads 'Tears in the Dark'. Some will find it disturbing, others will be upset by it - but you must know what went on. And if Ben Steel's return to his family does not bring a tear to your eye - shame on you. But be warned - when you have completed this book, you may see your Toyota in a totally different light.

    Ends - 590 words.


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