Main Terraced Hell: A Japanese Memoir of Defeat & Death in Northern Luzon, Philippines

Terraced Hell: A Japanese Memoir of Defeat & Death in Northern Luzon, Philippines

5.0 / 5.0
0 comments
This memoir from a Japanese civilian placed with the army in World War II offers a rare glimpse of the Japanese experience and psychology during this desperate time. Near the end of World War II, when the Japanese military machine was crushed but still hanging on, thousands of Japanese soldiers and civilians were caught in the backlash of the war in Northern Luzon, the Philippines, where half a million Japanese perished. This is an honest and straightforward account of defeat and death in the Philippines, described by a Japanese teacher who survived the horrible ordeal. Several things compelled me to write this story, says Ogawa. Since it was my record of a dangerous and fateful year in my life, I thought I should write an exact account of it for my children, an account which could be passed on to future generations. Ogawa questioned a system which demanded death rather than surrender where defeat was imminent and all hope gone. Constant bombing was their daily [...]fare, along with daring guerrilla raids and incursions of head-hunting tribal Igorots. This illustrated war memoir is intensely interesting, if somewhat gruesome reading, and is a valuable and important contribution to the literature of World War II.
Request Code : ZLIB.IO17762547
Categories:
Year:
2022
Publisher:
Tuttle Publishing
Language:
English
ISBN 10:
1462912109
ISBN 13:
9781462912100
ISBN:
9781462912100, 1462912109

Comments of this book

There are no comments yet.