Editorial
Reviews
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From
Publishers Weekly
The author of Flags of Our Fathers achieves
considerable but not equal success in
this new Pacific War-themed history. Again
he approaches the conflict focused on
a small group of men: nine American Navy
and Marine aviators who were shot down
off the Japanese-held island of Chichi
Jima in February 1945. All of them were
eventually executed by the Japanese; several
of the guilty parties were tried and condemned
as war criminals. When the book keeps
its eye on the aviators-growing up under
a variety of conditions before the war,
entering service, serving as the U. S.
Navy's spearhead aboard the fast carriers,
or facing captivity and death-it is as
compelling as its predecessor. However,
a chapter on prewar aviation is an uncritical
panegyric to WWI aerial bombing advocate
Billy Mitchell, who was eventually court-martialed
for criticizing armed forces brass. More
problematic is that Bradley tries to encompass
not only the whole history of the Pacific
War, but the whole history of the cultures
of the two opposing countries that led
to the racial attitudes which both sides
brought to the war. Those attitudes, Bradley
argues, played a large role in the brutal
training of the Japanese army, which led
to atrocities that in turn sharpened already
keen American hostility. Some readers'
hackles will rise at the discussion of
the guilt of both sides, but, despite
some missteps, Bradley attempts to strike
an informed balance with the perspective
of more than half a century.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information,
Inc.
From
Booklist
Bradley's phenomenal best-seller, Flags
of Our Fathers (2000), was rejected by
about 20 publishing houses before Bantam
took a chance. His new publisher is not
leaving the popularity of the encore to
chance, launching it with an intense promotional
campaign. Structured similarly to Flags,
which concerned the flag-raisers of Iwo
Jima, this work reconstructs the lives
of several young men at war. Eight pilots
and airmen were shot down by the Japanese
military at Chichi Jima in 1944-45, George
H. W. Bush among them. A well-known part
of his political biography, Bush's story
of escape is recounted somberly (Bush's
crewmates died). The fates of the others
shot down, who were captured, Bradley
gathered in part from a source that was
secret until a few years ago: records
of a war-crimes trial of Japanese officers
in command at Chichi Jima. Bradley sensitively
builds the trial's unpleasant evidence
(concealed, presumably, to spare pain
to the airmen's relatives) into the narrative,
which he frames with a portrayal of the
Japanese military mind-set, which condoned
the commission of atrocities. There are
many brutally graphic passages about the
torture and slaying of the American prisoners,
which may prove too daunting for some
readers, but Bradley succeeds in restoring
dignity to the American airmen. Sure to
command a large audience. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association.
All rights reserved
-W.E.B.
Griffin
"A powerful, compelling look at a
tragic time in our history."
-Hampton
Sides, author of Ghost Soldiers
"Bradley has once again given us
the human face of a war...a triumph of
careful listening...and most of all...empathy." |