War in the Pacific 1941-1945 (General Military)

by Richard Overy

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War In The Pacific 1941-1945 looks at the war against Japan in the Pacific Islands which formed an integral part of eventual Allied victory in World War II. Setting the scene with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the almost simultaneous attack on US bases on Guam and Wake Island, it then goes on to document the battles fought in the jungle islands of Guadalcanal and the Philippines and the seas of the Pacific. This war story is brought to life by the addition of 20 carefully selected show more facsimile pieces of memorabilia ranging from military orders to propaganda leaflets dropped by the Japanese on US troops to the personal diaries and letters home of both generals, officers and ordinary soldiers. show less

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It’s difficult to believe that “War in the Pacific,” a new oversized book from Osprey Publishing which coincides with the recent HBO special, is only 56 pages long because it packs in so much information regarding the Pacific conflicts of WWII.

The chapters – which begin with “Imperial Japan,” end with “The Japanese Surrender” and cover every major battle in between -- are only two pages long (10 inch by 11 inch pages, that is) and consist of concisely informative text along with a plethora of sidebars and photographs.

For example, the chapter regarding the protracted battle for the island of Peleliu has a timeline, sidebars on both Major General William Rupertus (the commander of the 1st Marine Division which initiated show more the US assault) and Captain Everett Pope (whose company of Marines captured “Hill 100”), and two photographs of the initial invasion (one showing the landing craft under fire before landing ashore and another showing the “alligator” vehicles and the Marines just arriving on the beach). There is also a photograph of an assault group stationed on the beach, another of an unnamed Marine who bears a haunted expression (the text explains that the battle cost the US nearly 2,000 casualties and more than 8,000 wounded), a contemporary photograph of the weapon used by the US Marines during the battle (an M1919 Browning machine gun), and one photograph showing the devastation the battle wreaked on the island. Other chapters contain bios on Japanese commanders.

The book also contains two folders of historical treasures: a plethora of facsimile documents directly related to the conflict, including desperate radio messages sent from Iwo Jima, a telegram addressed to the naval units in the Hawaii area regarding the attack on Pearl Harbor (“AIRRAID ON PEARHARBOR X THIS IS NO DRILL”), and a letter written by General MacArthur to his wife just before he set out to liberate the Philippines. Of especial note is the first draft of Roosevelt’s “Date of Infamy” speech (yes, it’s “Date” not “Day”) where the reader can see – among other things -- that the man himself scratched out the banal words “world history” and replaced them with compelling and unforgettable word “infamy.”

Also included is a copy of the Central Pacific edition of “Yank” magazine (a widely circulated weekly made available to all servicemen overseas during WWII), a “Pocket Guide to Australia” (issued to servicemen serving under MacArthur), and a poster advertising a US loan drive. Within the text are several helpful maps as well.

In his foreword, Captain Dale A. Dye (senior military advisor for the related HBO special) mentions that the war in the Pacific has been “overshadowed by the more accessible and understandable campaigns in Europe.” He hopes that with the publication of “War in the Pacific” that “much-needed light [will be shed] on the service and sacrifice of the gallant men and women who served in the Pacific War.”

Richard Overy’s book should go a long way towards making that happen: it’s an excellent introduction for those with no prior knowledge of the conflicts and at the same time, alluring eye candy for those already familiar.
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74+ Works 6,923 Members
Richard Overy is Professor of History at the University of Exeter, UK. He has published more than 25 books on the history of air power, the Second World War and the European dictatorship. He was the winner of the Wolfon Prize for history in 2004 and in 2014 he won a Cundill Award for his book The Bombing War: European 1939-1945. He is a Fellow of show more the British Academy, and a Member of the European Academy for Science and Arts. show less

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Classifications

Genres
History, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
940.5426History & geographyHistory of EuropeHistory of Europe1918-Military history of World War IICampaigns and battles by theatrePacific
LCC
D767 .O85History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaHistory (General)World War II (1939-1945)
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59
Popularity
522,603
Reviews
1
Rating
(4.00)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
7
ASINs
1