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Tears In The Darkness
 
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Tears In The Darkness [Hardcover]

M Norman
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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"No aspect of this battle or the infamous march that followed seems to have been overlooked. It is possible to buy volumes devoted to Bataan’s nurses, its military chaplains and, in Hampton Sides’s best-selling 2001 book, Ghost Soldiers, the men who rescued its survivors. It was not clear that this wall needed another brick. But then you pick up Michael Norman and Elizabeth M. Norman’s calm, stirring and humane Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and Its Aftermath, and you think: yes, we needed another brick. Tears in the Darkness is authoritative history. Ten years in the making, it is based on hundreds of interviews with American, Filipino and Japanese combatants. But it is also a narrative achievement. The book seamlessly blends a wide-angle view with the stories of many individual participants. And at this book’s beating emotional heart is the tale of just one American soldier, a young cowboy and aspiring artist out of Montana named Ben Steele . . . Mr. Norman is a Vietnam veteran and formerly a reporter for The New York Times; Ms. Norman’s books include Women at War: The Story of Fifty Military Nurses Who Served in Vietnam. In this book they step back, at regular intervals, to explain dispassionately what it was like to undergo the experiences these men went through. What are the physics of suffocation? How does a bomb blast actually kill a person? What exactly does lack of water do to a human body? Tears in the Darkness is a grim and comprehensive catalog of man’s inhumanity to man. In the end, though, Tears in the Darkness is a book about heroism and survival. All along you are glued, out of the corner of your eye, to one story, Ben Steele’s. If you aren’t weeping openly by the book’s final scenes, when he is at last able to call home and let his family know that he is still alive after more than three years ‘missing in action,’ during which time this thin young man lost 50 pounds, then you have a hard crust of salt around your soul." - Dwight Garner, The New York Times

"Ben Steele, a young cowboy on his home range in Montana who had enlisted as a soldier in World War II, was caught up in the battle for Bataan in the Philippines, then in the ensuing death march as a prisoner of the Japanese, which he barely survived. Beginning with harrowing sketches of that experience, and in the course of various adventures and misadventures, he continued to draw and paint, and has since become a truly distinguished artist of the West. Tears in the Darkness is a well-told, well-researched, and moving narrative." - Peter Matthiessen, author of Shadow Country

"Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and Its Aftermath, by Michael Norman and Elizabeth Norman: A new account of the Bataan Death March, in which more than 70,000 American and Filipino prisoners of war were victims of appalling barbarism - a particularly grim episode of World War II following Japan's invasion of the Philippines. Driven from Manila into the hills of the Bataan peninsula, the combined Allied forces fought without hope of reinforcement or escape until they had no choice but to capitulate. The largest surrender in U.S. military annals was followed by a forced 60-mile march along Luzon's main highway during which more than 10,000 of the POWs were summarily murdered or died from torture, wounds and disease. For Americans the Death March was a first encounter with the brutality that would define Japan's military behavior, and the fact that the story has been told many times before does not dissuade Michael and Elizabeth Norman, both professors at New York University, from another effort. The result is an extremely detailed and thoroughly chilling treatment that, given the passage of time and thinning of ranks, could serve as popular history's final say on the subject. The Normans spent a decade in research and writing, interviewing more than 100 surviving American veterans and relatives of scores of others, and traveling to Japan to track down the most elusive and difficult sources - some 20 former soldiers who were involved in the march and a guard from one of the miserable camps where more captives died from sickness, torture or starvation. The authors also find an ideal protagonist in Ben Steele, a former Montana cowboy who in 1940, at 22, joined the Army Air Corps and was sent to the Philippines. Steele survived the Death March and prison camp, and his personal story is the thread by which the authors spin their harrowing narrative, also using Steele's sketches to illustrate it. They find some sympathy for Gen. Masaharu Homma, the Japanese commander in the Philippines. His 1946 trial and execution as a war criminal showed how the Imperial Army was driven to excesses by right-wing racist fanatics who intimidated its senior officers, Homma among them. But as with other latter-day critics, they have little admiration for Gen. Douglas MacArthur, the U.S. commander in the Philippines who was being glorified at home in 1942 as the greatest American military hero since Ulysses S. Grant. On Jan. 15, the authors report, McArthur sent his beleaguered troops on Bataan a would-be morale booster, promising them that reinforcements in the form of troops and planes were on the way from the United States. 'It was a lie, a Judas kiss,' they write. 'The Philippines was cut off. Washington knew it and so did MacArthur.'"- Richard Pyle, The Associated Press

"Assiduous account of the Japanese conquest of the Philippines in World War II and the fate of the American garrison there. The 'death march' after Bataan fell in April 1942 has been a byword for the worst warfare can bring to a soldier. Some 76,000 American and Filipino soldiers surrendered, and their Japanese enemies despised them for doing so. The surrender was, write the Normans, 'the single largest defeat in American military history.' The subsequent forced march of the prisoners, many of them ill and wounded and all of them malnourished, led to more than 10,000 deaths. By the authors' account, the Americans were a mixed lot, poorly equipped, trained and led-which does not square with many other accounts of the early war in the Philippines, and which will doubtless excite discussion in military-history circles. What is certain is that the Japanese soldiers were little better off, short on rations, beaten and abused by their officers and marching everywhere, since, their doctrine stated, 'a drop of gas is as precious as a drop of blood.' . . . [The Normans'] story says a great deal about the inglorious-and rightly unglorified-aspects of war, from the sense of shame that settled on the American commander at the moment of surrender to the terrible years that lay ahead. Drawing on the memories of participants on both sides, the Normans provide a careful history of a ghastly episode that still reverberates. Highly recommended for students of the Pacific War."- Kirkus Reviews

"Unlike historians who have spotlighted the titans-MacArthur and Wainwright, Yamashita and Homma-who matched strategies in the Philippines in 1942, the Normans focus on the ordinary soldiers who bore the brunt of the wartime savagery. At the center of this searing narrative stands Ben Steele, a Montana cowboy remarkable for the fortitude that sustains him through fierce combat, humiliating surrender, and then the infamous Bataan Death March into imprisonment: four years of unrelenting slave labor, starvation, torture, beatings, and disease. Because Steele went on in his postwar life to capture his wartime ordeal in harrowing drawings (here reproduced), readers confront in both image and word the brutality of war and the desperation of captivity. Readers learn how news of Japanese atrocities inflamed an American passion for vengeance and justified horrific bombing raids - incendiary and then nuclear - against Japanese cities. But readers will find it hard to view such raids as fitting punishment of a bestial enemy after reading the Normans’ chronicle of the bitter experiences of very human and often guilt-wracked Japanese soldiers. The narrative even humanizes the anguished Japanese commanders condemned by a victors’ justice that held them accountable for offenses of out-of-control subordinates. An indispensable addition to every World War II collection."- Bryce Christensen, Booklist (starred review)

"The battle of Bataan in the Philippines in 1942 resulted in the Japanese taking about 75,000 American and Filipino prisoners of war, America's worst military defeat ever. The prisoners were transferred across the Philippines, and treated horrifically in the process, in what became known as the Bataan Death March. The authors conducted 400 interviews with survivors and have put together an exhaustive narrative. They focus chiefly on Ben Steele, who survived the Philippine battles, the march, and 41 months in the slave labor camps. As much as a military history, this is the biography of a Montana cowboy transformed by great events."- Edwin Burgess, Library Journal

Product Description

For the first four months of 1942, U.S., Filipino, and Japanese soldiers fought what was America’s first major land battle of World War II, the battle for the tiny Philippine peninsula of Bataan. It ended with the surrender of 76,000 Filipinos and Americans, the single largest defeat in American military history.

The defeat, though, was only the beginning, as Michael and Elizabeth M. Norman make dramatically clear in this powerfully original book. From then until the Japanese surrendered in August 1945, the prisoners of war suffered an ordeal of unparalleled cruelty and savagery: forty-one months of captivity, starvation rations, dehydration, hard labor, deadly disease, and torture—far from the machinations of General Douglas MacArthur.

The Normans bring to the story remarkable feats of reportage and literary empathy. Their protagonist, Ben Steele, is a figure out of Hemingway: a young cowboy turned sketch artist from Montana who joined the army to see the world. Juxtaposed against Steele’s story and the sobering tale of the Death March and its aftermath is the story of a number of Japanese soldiers.

The result is an altogether new and original World War II book: it exposes the myths of military heroism as shallow and inadequate; it makes clear, with great literary and human power, that war causes suffering for people on all sides.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Battle of Bataan was only the beginnng, Jun 17 2011
By 
Richard J. Mcisaac (Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   

Tears in the Darkness, Michael & Elizabeth Norman, Farrar et al, 2009, pp.464

There are many books written exposing the horrors encountered by American prisoners of war (POW) under the Japanese but I have never read one the truly captures the essence of their suffering as they are inflicted with jungle diseases exacerbated by starvation and malnutrition. As the authors point out, these were all preventable through basic vitamins and minerals denied them. This story is told through a real live POW, Ben Steele.

The first part of the story begins with the invasion of the Philippines Jan. 1942 by 43,000 Japanese against 130,000 American-Filipino soldiers. Though the American-Filipino army initially inflicted heavy losses on the Japanese, eventually sheer force propelled this rag-tagged army into the Bataan peninsula (poorly trained and unmotivated Americans, Filipinos with no experience, many without weapons, only very basic drill). Arguably, the American-Filipino should have been able to resist the much smaller Japanese force ' the reasons for their failure are explored.

The authors have considerable respect for the committed and well-trained Japanese soldier . In Chapter 4 they humanize both armies by pointing out specific names and incidents; heroes and cowards. There is no display of hatred for the Japanese and they are not presented as evil, though one would wonder on hearing of massacres and wholesale abuses. The Japanese soldier was subjected to many abuses by anyone above him and it appears this toughness and many hardships vented itself against those who added to his misery. The authors continue describing some of the conditions where they were out-gunned, out-manned with dead and wounded screaming all around them, no hope of reinforcements, and suffering from hunger, thirst and exhaustion. The story of Kigoshi is a vivid example of a Japanese soldier committed to his country, to die, never to surrender. Another incident, April 12 when they were ordered to execute 400 Filipino officers shows that many Japanese felt this was dishonourable and some outright refused to participate.

The Battle for Bataan lasted 99 days and at surrender April 9, became the single largest American defeat-76,000 American-Filipino soldiers. Corregidor would surrender May 6 (9000 Amer. & 2000 Filipinos). To the Japanese, the surrender of 76,000 American-Filipinos on April 9, 1942 was unforgiveable and incomprehensible. They lost all respect!

Now the authors advance into the second phase ' Bataan Death March, 66 miles to the railhead which would take them to the prison camps. Throughout, they were beaten, harassed, punched, and starved. The searing heat and deprivation of water would take its toll as would diseases from drinking stagnant filthy water. The personal stories of suffering Americans humanizes the story, and the authors provide many. The reader will find it difficult to comprehend the insufferable inhumane conditions endured by these men. This was not just a 66m march, it was a tortuous journey of the walking dead, wounded, sick, and diseased.

The third phase is the existence at Camp O'Donnell of 47,000 Filipinos and 9270 Americans. Hell was to be relived as they endured more privations: lack of water, beatings, lack of food and nutrition, lack of medical supplies and extremely unsanitary conditions. Dysentery was rampant and everyone suffered from it and a host of other diseases brought on through privations. Included is an unknown story where 300 prisoners formed a work gang south of Manila. One third would die from the same privations coupled with arduous work days clearing forests for roads. The Japanese soldier also suffered from lack of food and sufficient nutrition.

The fourth phase is the unimaginable shipping of thousands of decrepit, sickly and diseased POW's to forced labour camps throughout Japan. I knew nothing of this prior and was horrified to learn of the transport ship's holding tanks filled beyond capacity with men who had survived the camps. 192,600 Allied prisoners would be distributed to 367 work camps, 165 camps in Japan. The Bataan soldiers were shipped out starting July 1944. They now had to endure stifling heat, claustrophobia, quarters so tight they had to fold in their knees, lack of food and water for days, screams of the suffering, vomit, stench of dysentery, and forever presence of the dead. I can't imagine how any of them survived. The unbelievable incident of the Enoura MAru, sunk with its holds full, is beyond horrifying.

The story of the Bataan Death March is not widely known and the authors have to be praised for memorializing one of the worse incidents of human abuses of POW's and this despite the enemy's Bushido code. The Japanese soldier was not generally brutal but given the circumstances of the initial fighting when many were killed along with the severe shortages of troops, food, accommodations and no facilities for the wounded, their frustrations were taken out against those who caused this. The American-Filipino force, though not the most professional soldier, put up severe resistance for months under conditions never thought imaginable. The brass knew there was no relief, knew they were unprepared to defend all the Philippines against a well-trained/disciplined army, knew they would be eventually defeated, knew their supplies of weaponry and food would deplete but at no time could they have imagined the inhumane treatment which would be administered. This is a story which should be studied in schools, not for the battles but for the display of courage and endurance and as an example of what humanity can be led to do when pushed to his limits. I hope this story is never forgotten and becomes a lasting tribute to all the heroes of Bataan. It is one worthy of unending tears!
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5.0 out of 5 stars ... an orgy of sadistic cruelty..., Nov 9 2010
This review is from: Tears In The Darkness (Hardcover)
The horrible story of the Bataan death march is not nearly as well known as the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The dropping of both atomic bombs in August 1945 seems to overshadow all previous crimes of the Japanese occupational forces, e.g. their massacre of the citizens of Nanking in China (committed in January 1937), and others, of which the Bataan march could be described as an orgy of sadistic cruelty.

In January 1942 the American and British troops, defending the Philippine Islands, were left without the necessary logistic support from USA. Already toward the end of February, President Roosevelt ordered the Commanding General Douglas McArthur to withdraw to Australia. Also in Australia was the stockpile of US supplies for the troops, but unsent to the soldiers on the Philippines after the Japanese attack on the islands had been launched. So the American troops soon had to cut their daily food rations in half. Consequently, on the 9th of April, when they had to surrender to the Japanese, all were hungry, emaciated and weak. On top of this, many were already sick with dysentery, malaria, or both. They had the sickening feeling that their country, for which they had fought in the far-away Philippines, had abandoned them.

Already their first encounter with the Japanese troops to which they surrendered, was a shock for them. The Japanese soldiers had taken away their heavy knapsacks and ordered the weakened Americans to carry them, entirely neglecting the poor physical status of their captives. Later, when the supreme Japanese General Masaharu Homma ordered all the enemy troops on the Bataan Peninsula to be moved some 100 km north, their ordeal could not be imagined by any civilized person. Long daily marches, mostly without food or even without water, suffering rain or hot sunshine, steady beating, bayoneting, or even sporadic murder became more a rule than an accident for the poor victims. Occasionally a Japanese officer beheaded a prisoner with his sword for the slightest disobedience. Whole groups of prisoners were diverted, to be shot and thrown down a slope or into an abyss.

The sadistic torture by their captivators became especially apparent, when e.g. a Japanese car met the marching troops. The soldier suddenly opened the car door to hit several Americans so hard that they fell down. For those who were hit too much and could not stand up fast enough, their fate was sealed. The following cars ran over them, until the unfortunate prisoners became entirely flat, like a cat, on a highway. The maltreatment did not end when they eventually arrived at their destination. Insufficient food and, poor hygienic conditions spread dysentery. Practically no medical care and almost no medications caused numerous fatalities.

For those, who survived, the worst was still to come. The Japanese put them on ships to be transferred to Japan. Sailing on the battered freighters lasted up to two months - providing the ship was not sunk by an American submarine. The prisoners, who were stuffed into the cargo area, had to suffer daily temperatures over 40 C (104 F), without enough water or food. There were no toilets or other sanitary facilities. The life of that sick, dirty, emaciated, hungry and thirsty crowd soon became degraded to a pure Darwinian survival of the fittest. The strongest of them, who survived, must eventually work in Japanese mines. There the lodging and food were much better, but still too poor to support hard labor in of the mines. Their ordeal (and of those, who were left on the Philippines) was over after August 15, 1945, when Japan surrendered.

The entire book is entwined with the story of an enlisted boy, Ben Steele, who went through the complete ordeal described above. This gives the narrative a sense of first hand experience. Steele, who later became a professor of painting, has also contributed numerous drawings of his times during the Japanese captivity, which illustrate the book.

After the war the Japanese military commanders were put before the Court for their war crimes. The main culprit was the supreme commanding general Masaharu Homma. Though he had traveled over the road where the prisoners were being driven northwards, he said he did not see anything unusual: no dead on, or near the street, no beating or stabbing by his troops, less so any systematic killing. And all those down the line of command were just "obeying the orders from above". For those of us, who have survived the Italian and German occupation in Europe, such excuses of the culprits who must defend themselves before the Courts, established after the war, look very familiar...

This very informative and well- written book should be read by all those, who keep lamenting how inhuman the American atomic bombing was. Such reading might help achieve some balance in their opinion of the crimes committed during WWII.


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5.0 out of 5 stars Tears In The Darkness, Oct 5 2009
By 
Miguel P. Tecson (Vancouver,B,C.,Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Tears In The Darkness (Hardcover)
Compared to most of the accounts of the Bataan Death March which I have an extensive collection, this book is extraordinary in that despite the horrendous subject it is so elegantly written it ranks as literature.........Dr. M. P. Tecson,Vancouver,Canada.
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