|
First Into Nagasaki: The Censored Eyewitness Dispatches on Post-Atomic Japan and Its Prisoners of War | 
| Author: George Weller Creator: Anthony Weller Publisher: Three Rivers Press Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $7.96 You Save: $6.99 (47%)
New (31) Used (13) from $7.47
Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 137664
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 0307342026 Dewey Decimal Number: 940.54252244 EAN: 9780307342027 ASIN: 0307342026
Publication Date: December 31, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: In pristine condition.
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Lost for more than half a century, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist George Weller’s legendary dispatches from post-atomic-bomb Nagasaki were discovered after his death by his son, Anthony Weller. Here, this historic body of work is published for the first time.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
Enlightening- It certainly changed my understanding of WW II December 3, 2007 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book provides great first-person insight into the following: -how were Allied prisoners treated by the Japanese in route to Japan and in the Japanese prison camps? -what were the effects of the Nagasaki bomb on humans and on Nagasaki? -what did survivors that were near the explosion see and experience? -how did the Japanese people view the use of the atomic bomb immediately after it's use? -what was/was not censored about WW II?
I often lose interest in a book and don't finish it (A.D.D. I suppose) but I read this book front to back. It's certain to alter your understanding of this topic.
Maybe it was good that this material was lost for so long and only now published. I think it enlightens those of us doing some soul-searching about the use of the atomic bombs on Japan by the United States; more so than if it were published 60 years ago. Read it and form your own opinions.
A Stiff But Important Read October 20, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
In the foreword, Walter Cronkite says: "This is an important book -- important and gripping." Somehow, categorizing a book as "important" has always struck me as a rather weak recommendation ... until now.
A gentleman I have known for years has told me often of his brother, a prisoner of the Japanese, beaten repeatedly in the coal mines of Japan. In fact, almost 50 years later, he lost a kidney as a direct result of those assaults. This book illustrates that I did not have even the foggiest idea until now of the intensity of base brutality in the coal mines of Baron Mitsui.
Although a better title may have been "The Censored Dispatches" or something similar, that takes absolutely nothing away from the power of this book. As a published historian, I have learned that there is no substitute for the firtshand account of someone who was actually there, and the immediacy of these dispatches, feverishly written over a few weeks, have the unmistakeable ring of on-the-spot authenticity as told by a skilled observer.
This is strong stuff, disturbing and hard to read. I found that setting the book aside from time to time helped me to be better able to stop and ponder the ramifications of these distant events in our days ...
* Is cansorship right or wrong? And who decides? * When is harsh brutality right (whether in person or by a remote weapon)? * When (if ever) is it right to make a "deal with the devil" for "the greater good" (such as leaving some wrongdoers go unpunished so that they might share their research or help the Allied cause -- i.e., Baron Mitsui died wealthy and at a comfortable old age) * What other important things are we ignorant of because they were censored? * How can we learn from the horrors of the past in our history-poor present?
This book is highly recommended as a window into an almost forgotten chapter of the past, one that we cannot afford to forget or ignore.
Uncover the truth of MacArthur's post-war Japan. September 19, 2007 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Mr Weller's journey was remarkable in that so little is known about the witnesses and survivors of the atom bombs. His courage and determination to thwart MacArthur's press restrictions should be praised and followed as a journalistic template in the 21st century, in Iraq or anywhere secrecy is used to gag to blind the public to the consequences of our actions.
The striking conditions of the POW camps where prisoners were human shields and disposable slave labor is appaling. In Nagasaki the idea that "thick soled shoes" will block gamma rays and his skepticism of Japanese doctors and authorities, even the victims of the mysterious "sickness", is therefore obvious. Heinous war bred numbing crimes on both sides.
My father arrived in Nagaskai harbor in September '45. He still refuses to discuss what he witnessed(as did Cindy Franks father in "My Father's Secret War")except for his recollections of resistance to the occupation by the Black Dragon Society and the huge toll lost in disarming the minefields of the Sea of Japan. This book has contributed to my understanding of and appreciation/discomfort in the use of the atom bombs. I probably wouldn't exist as Dad was part of the Navy's first wave of the proposed invasion.
Finding out about post-war Japan is like scything through a glacier, thank you Weller family for the clear light.
Required reading April 12, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I was 13 at the time the Nagasaki bomb was detonated and have always wondered about it all. Even when I was in USAF Pilot Training classes 10 years later,the Classified training which covered these weapons was mostly "How it Works" but nothing memorable about what it does to humans or structures. Now 40 some years later I have a first hand account from someone who was there shortly after and talked to survivors.
A disturbing but beneficial bonus is the accounts of the Allied POW's tribulations while in Japanese hands. Those were awful times, at best.
And last but not least, the accounts of censorship during that time are eye-opening.
Highly recommended, especially to the historically deficit younger generations.
Not what I expected April 1, 2007 6 out of 16 found this review helpful
Based on the title, I expected this to be an account of the bomb dropped on Nagasaki. There is certainly some of that. But it's really a book about the author/war correspondent. The book reiterates countless times how the author was the first American into Nagasaki after the bomb. That's impressive (although later in the book we read about someone who got to Hiroshima earlier)-- but the book doesn't contain much substance about Nagasaki. The rest of the book is a mish-mash of other aspects of the war, and it gets repetitive about how merciless the Japanese were to our prisoners. Toward the end the book tries to become political and focus on censorship, which wasn't very interesting.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |