Pearl Harbor Ghosts :The Legacy of December 7, 1941

3.92 ( 446 Ratings by Goodreads)
Pearl Harbor Ghosts

Pearl Harbor Ghosts :The Legacy of December 7, 1941

3.92 (446 Ratings by Goodreads)
paperback
Published: 1 May, 2003
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Description

* Reconstructed from the memoiries of those who were there *Tells the story from the American, Japanese and local perspective *Published to commemorate the 60th anniversary Full of gripping drama and vibrant details, here is the intimate human story of the events surrounding that fateful day of December 7, 1941-the glamorous tropical city that seemed too beautiful to suffer devastation ... the stunned naval personnel whose lives would permanently be divided into before and after Pearl Harbor ... the ordinary Honolulu residents who were tragically unprepared to be the first target in the Pacific war ... the Japanese pilots who manned the squadron of deadly silver bombers ... and the island's community of Japanese-Americans whose lives would never be the same again. Blending meticulous historic recreation with lively reporting, Clarke counterpoints the freeze-frame nightmare of the 1941 bombing with the disturbing realities of present-day Honolulu, where hundreds of veterans, both American and Japanese, converge each year to relive every hour of the attack. Wealthy Waikiki landowners and native Hawaiian farmers, admirals and nurses, Navy wives and government officials-all take their part in Clarke's rich tapestry of memory and insight. In the end, Pearl Harbor emerges as a trauma that spread from Oahu to engulf the nation and the world-an event that continues to reverberate in the lives of all who experienced it.
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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780345446077
ISBN10 0345446070
Number Of Pages 320
Item Weight 1000 g
Publisher / Reseller Presidio Press
Format paperback
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Media Reviews

Clarke's ability to evoke the feel and mood of Hawaii then and now will remind readers of Jan Morris and Joan Didion.
-The Washington Post

Filled with fascinating stories told by ordinary people who lived through the extraordinary weekend of December 5 to 7, 1941.
-The New York Times Book Review

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