Submitted by watchungbooksellers on Wed, 08/26/2009 - 4:05pm
09/12/2009 1:00 pm
09/12/2009 2:00 pm
This grimly absorbing history revisits the worst ordeal Americans
experienced during WWII. Michael Norman, a former New York Times
reporter, and Elizabeth Norman (Women at War) pen a gripping narrative
of the 1942 battle for the Bataan peninsula in the Philippines, the
surrender of 76,000 Americans and Filipinos to the Japanese and the
infamous death march that introduced the captives to the starvation,
dehydration and murderous Japanese brutality that would become routine
for the next three years.
Focusing intermittently on American
POW Ben Steele, whose sketches adorn the book, the narrative follows
the prisoners through the hell of Japanese prison and labor camps. (The
lowest circle is the suffocating prison ship where men went mad with
thirst and battened on their comrades' blood.) The authors are
unsparing but sympathetic in telling the Japanese side of the story;
indeed, they are much harder on the complacent, arrogant American
commander Douglas MacArthur than on his Japanese counterpart. There's
sorrow but not much pity in this story; as all human aspiration
shrivels to a primal obsession with food and water, flashes of
compassion and artistic remembrance only occasionally light the gloom.