Online Book Reader

Home Category

Retribution_ The Battle for Japan, 1944-45 - Max Hastings [0]

By Root 863 0
CONTENTS

Title Page

Dedication

Epigraph

List of Illustrations

List of Maps

Introduction

CHAPTER ONE Dilemmas and Decisions

1. War in the East

2. Summit on Oahu

CHAPTER TWO Japan: Defying Gravity

1. Yamato Spirit

2. Warriors

CHAPTER THREE The British in Burma

1. Imphal and Kohima

2. “The Forgotten Army”

CHAPTER FOUR Titans at Sea

1. Men and Ships

2. Flyboys

CHAPTER FIVE America’s Return to the Philippines

1. Peleliu

2. Leyte: The Landing

CHAPTER SIX “Flowers of Death”: Leyte Gulf

1. Shogo

2. The Ordeal of Taffy 3

3. Kamikaze

CHAPTER SEVEN Ashore: Battle for the Mountains

CHAPTER EIGHT China: Dragon by the Tail

1. The Generalissimo

Photo Insert One

2. Barefoot Soldiers

3. The Fall of Stilwell

CHAPTER NINE MacArthur on Luzon

1. “He Is Insane on This Subject!”: Manila

2. Yamashita’s Defiance

CHAPTER TEN Bloody Miniature: Iwo Jima

CHAPTER ELEVEN Blockade: War Underwater

CHAPTER TWELVE Burning a Nation: LeMay

1. Superfortresses

2. Fire-Raising

CHAPTER THIRTEEN The Road past Mandalay

CHAPTER FOURTEEN Australians: “Bludging” and “Mopping Up”

CHAPTER FIFTEEN Captivity and Slavery

1. Inhuman Rites

2. Hell Ships

CHAPTER SIXTEEN Okinawa

1. Love Day

2. At Sea

Photo Insert Two

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Mao’s War

1. Yan’an

2. With the Soviets

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Eclipse of Empires

CHAPTER NINETEEN The Bombs

1. Fantasy in Tokyo

2. Reality at Hiroshima

CHAPTER TWENTY Manchuria: The Bear’s Claws

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE The Last Act

1. “God’s Gifts”

2. Despair and Deliverance

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO Legacies

A Brief Chronology of the Japanese War

Acknowledgements

Notes and Sources

A Note About the Author

Also by Max Hastings

Copyright

In memory of my son

CHARLES HASTINGS

1973–2000

War is human, it is as something that is lived like a love or a hatred…It might better be described as a pathological condition because it admits of accidents which not even a skilled physician could have foreseen.

—Marcel Proust

“Oh, surely they’ll stop now. They’ll be horrified at what they’ve done!,” he thought, aimlessly following on behind crowds of stretchers moving away from the battlefield.

—Tolstoy’s Pierre Bezukhov at Borodino, 1812

In 1944, there seemed absolutely no reason to suppose that the war might end in 1945.

—Captain Luo Dingwen, Chinese Nationalist Army

ILLUSTRATIONS


INSERT ONE

Roosevelt, MacArthur and Nimitz on Hawaii. (© U.S. National Archives/CORBIS)

Admiral William “Bull” Halsey. (U.S. National Archives/CORBIS)

Sikh troops charge a foxhole in Burma. (Imperial War Museum, London: IND 4550)

Elephant transport in Burma. (Imperial War Museum, London: SE 3189)

River crossing during the 1944–45 Burma campaign. (Imperial War Museum, London: SE 4100)

Bill Slim. (Imperial War Museum, London: SE 3310)

Two scenes during the Japanese invasion of China. (© Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS; © Associated Press/PA Photos)

Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai. (© AFP/Getty Images)

The puppet emperor Pu Yi. (© Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS)

Chiang Kai-shek. (© Bettman/CORBIS)

The Japanese Combined Fleet on its passage towards destruction in September 1944. (Naval Historical Foundation, Washington)

USS Gambier Bay bracketed by Japanese fire during the Battle of Leyte Gulf. (© U.S. National Archives/CORBIS)

The cruiser Birmingham aids the stricken Princeton after a crippling air attack. (Naval Historical Foundation, Washington)

Nimitz, King and Spruance aboard the cruiser Indianapolis. (Naval Historical Foundation, Washington)

Krueger and Kinkaid. (© U.S. National Archives/CORBIS)

Kurita. (Naval Historical Foundation, Washington)

Ugaki. (Courtesy of Donald M. Goldstein, University of Pittsburgh)

Men crouch tensed aboard a landing craft. (Naval Historical Foundation, Washington)

Marine amphibious vehicles approach Peleliu. (© U.S. National Archives/CORBIS)

A task group led by U.S. carriers at sea in late 1944. (© Bettman/CORBIS)

A pilot in the “ready room.” (Naval Historical Foundation,

Return Main Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader