Prisoners of the Japanese by Gavan Daws

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Prisoners of the Japanese by Gavan Daws

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Summary

A devastating portrait of the suffering of Japanese-held POWs in the Second World War.

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Prisoners of the Japanese by Gavan Daws

Gavan Daws combined ten years of documentary research and hundreds of interviews with POWs on three continents to write this shattering re-creation of the experience of Allied POWs of the Second World War in the Pacific -- British, Australian, American and Dutch. The Japanese army took over 140,000 military prisoners, and one in four died at the hands of their captors. Drawing directly on the vivid memories of the survivors, Daws brings the reader heart-breakingly close to the atrocities of the Burma--Siam railway and the Bataan death march, the horrors of Japanese medical experiments, the struggles of POWs to stay alive and remain human, the permanent scars that the survivors carry, and the incomprehensible refusal of their own governments to support their attempts to get an apology from Japan. Daws' account, which was neither researched nor written under military auspices, is the humanly indispensable reverse side of official history. This book is his 'best effort to tell a story conspicuously absent from the official histories of both sides, missing in action, so to speak: the truth of life according to the POW.' In this, he has succeeded masterfully.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9781416511533
ISBN 10 1416511539
Title Prisoners of the Japanese
Author Gavan Daws
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Year published 2007-05-01
Number of pages 464
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
Note Unavailable