Picture of author.

For other authors named George Weller, see the disambiguation page.

11+ Works 680 Members 9 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)

Works by George Weller

Associated Works

The Family Reader of American Masterpieces (1959) — Contributor — 17 copies
Tales for Males (1945) — Contributor — 13 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Weller, George Anthony
Other names
WELLER, George
Birthdate
1907-07-13
Date of death
2002-12-19
Gender
male
Education
Harvard College (BA ∙ 1929)
Occupations
novelist
playwright
journalist
Awards and honors
Pulitzer Prize (Reporting ∙ 1943)
George Polk Award
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Massachusetts, USA

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
This is a book about military censorship. MacArthur and the US government did not want any reportage of any lingering or long-term radiation affects of the bomb. That is why Weller's dispatches were suppressed. Interestingly, Hiroshima was much more destructive because its topography was flat, whereas Nagasaki's was much more hilly. But Nagasaki reportage was just 20% or so of the book. Most of the book was about his reports of the Japanese POW camps, and the atrocities done there. I was show more most impressed by the quality of his dispatches: the facts and just the facts. There is relative little spin. Very, very different from the reporting done by "embedded" reporters during the Iraq War. Here is an example of "objective" reporting, that I miss from any journalist in any media today. Raw history. Recommended. show less
This book is mistitled. Very little of it is about Nagasaki. Almost all of it is about the POWs in Japan and on the way to Japan in aptly described “death ships.” It has so little about Nagasaki, it is almost false advertising.

The death ship narrative is a feat of exceptional journalism and told with gruesome, but respectful detail.

A strong book, but the misleading title is an annoyance.
½
Excellent addition to anyone reading about WWII, Japan, atomic bombs, Gen MacArthur, prisoners of war. There will never be a definitive answer to the question of should we have dropped the bombs, but this adds info about the question of the character of the Japanese at war. They would never have stopped fighting until the Emperor told them to. Their treatment of prisoners reveals what they would have been like as conquerors and masters. Have they ever accepted responsibility for their part show more in starting the war? The hell they put the pows through... no words are good enough to describe it. Talks about the propaganda presented after the war by both sides. Does not attempt to give a final answer, but does present more information that should be considered... show less
½
Review from my 13 year old.

“I really enjoyed it. It even has actual photographs. It tells the story of the paratroops from the early beginnings of people with balloons (Ch. 2) to the end of WW2. A lot of interesting information such as the German boxer Max Schmeling was a paratroop. I’d recommend this to people interested in military history. *note from me-older readers may recall Max Schmeling as an answer in Trivial Pursuit.*

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
11
Also by
4
Members
680
Popularity
#37,180
Rating
3.9
Reviews
9
ISBNs
19
Languages
1
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs