Pages: 240 (Hardcover) ISBN: 0304355283 Pub: Weidenfeld & Nicolson Pub date: 2000-11-09 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 321685
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Reader Reviews:Interesting but lacking in something... (0/0 people found this helpful)I was very excited when I ordered this book. I've been interested in the history of the second world war for a long time now but never before have I had the oppurtunity to read a book from the Japanese point of view.
What a Book (0/0 people found this helpful)Every one is patriotic to there country..but when I read this book, it made me realize the Human Suffering for every Country In World War 2..It made me realise also How Important Peace is and no more wars. Get this book, Read this book and let it inspire you! The Burma campaign as never told before (3/3 people found this helpful)A unique book, telling the story of the Burma campaign from a very different perspective. A refreshing insight into a war which no one likes talking about - simply because this was one war where no side can claim glory. An excellent read! How refreshing (4/8 people found this helpful)I wasn't there. So I ride a Japanese motorcycle and have a Japanese watch. It is common to knock to the Japs. How badly they treated the Ally POW's and, I guess, they deserve all the knocks they get because of it. But this helps to balance the overall picture. The Japs suffered too. The hunger, thirst, wounds, fighting. Whether we believed in waht they did or not doesn't matter, THEY did, and it's all here. From the start to the end. The Triumphs, the hopes, the tears. They suffered too - and most probably didn't want to do it. The Emperor's soldiers in victory and defeat (17/17 people found this helpful)TALES BY JAPANESE SOLDIERS Of The Burma Campaign 1942-1945 By Kazuo Tamayama and John Nunneley The Japanese are famously reticent about the detail of their involvement in the Second World War. Now, for the first time, 62 personal accounts by private soldiers, non-commissioned officers and junior officers tell how they lived, fought, and died, in that merciless conflict from which only 118,352 of an army of 305,501 returned home. Much of the material has been selected from recollections preserved in regimental histories, the closely-guarded, restricted records of the All-Burma Veterans Association of Japan, private papers, personal memoirs and interviews. No similar volume has ever before been published, either in Japanese or English. Make no mistake. These are straightforward, unvarnished accounts, often stark and shocking, often intensely moving, by infantrymen, gunners, engineers, medics, navy men, pilots. They reveal, also, astonishing contrasts in human behaviour on the battlefield: of naked, adrenaline-fuelled savagery - and tears of compassion for the dying enemy soldier. Remarkably, there is ungrudging admiration for 'The Great British Empire' they were fighting to destroy. They tell, almost casually, of that routine reckless bravery which soldiers of the Allied Forces witnessed again and again and could scarcely comprehend. Of unquestioned readiness to die a glorious death for their country - and deep melancholy at its imminent prospect. 'We cut our nails and hair, wrapped them in paper and sent them to the rear in case our bones were not recovered to be sent home for consecration at the Yasukuni Shrine.' And when taking one's own life in the 1944 monsoon retreat along 'Human Remains Highway' to the Chindwin River was to thousands of wounded, diseased and starving soldiers the only way out of a veritable hell. The book covers the Second World War's longest campaign from victorious invasion to defeat and surrender. In chronological sequence each vividly readable story is headed with the name, rank and unit of the writer. British, Indian, Gurkha, East and West African and Chinese units are identified in scores of encounters, skirmishes and set-piece battles. These include: Bilin * Buthidaung * Donbaik * Imphal * Indainggyi * Indin * Irrawaddy River * Kanbalu * Kohima * Kokkogwa * Kuzeik * Kyaukse * Mandalay * Monywa * Rangoon * Pegu * Sangshak * Singel * Shwedaung * Shwegyin * Sinzeya * Sittang * Tavoy * Thadodan * Wanetchaung * Yenangyaung. Timed to mark the 60th Anniversary of the outbreak of 'The Pacific War' that threw Britain against Japan, 'TALES BY JAPANESE SOLDIERS' is the authentic voice of Nippon's own 'Forgotten Army' despatched to fight to the death in Burma's jungles and mountains and plains. Similar ProductsUtmost Savagery: Three Days of Tar Burma Victory Five Years,Four Fronts: A German Officer's World War II Combat Memoir CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Countries & Regions -> Asia -> East Asia -> Japan
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