Showing posts with label world war ii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world war ii. Show all posts

The Navajo Code Talkers (25th Anniversary Edition) Review

The Navajo Code Talkers (25th Anniversary Edition)
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The Navajo Code Talkers (25th Anniversary Edition) ReviewI read this several years ago, being shocked that at age 40 something, I had never heard of the part the Navajos had played in the war. This book will appeal to anyone interested in languages, secret codes, World War II, or obscure history. The photographs and illustrations are a wonderful enhancement. Great subject, great book...I've mentioned it to many people over the years, most of them as unaware (and some disbelieving)as I was of these Navajo heroes.The Navajo Code Talkers (25th Anniversary Edition) Overview

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In Harm's Way: The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis and the Extraordinary Story of Its Survivors Review

In Harm's Way: The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis and the Extraordinary Story of Its Survivors
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In Harm's Way: The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis and the Extraordinary Story of Its Survivors ReviewLike, I'm sure, most of you, I first heard of the USS Indianapolis and the horrific events surrounding its sinking in the movie Jaws. You'll recall the Robert Shaw character telling about being adrift in the waters of the Pacific as sharks circled and attacked the helpless men. This story has such a compelling fascination that it has spawned a series of books, documentaries and even a TV movie. Doug Stanton's new account can take its place with the very best of them. Drawing heavily on interviews with survivors and on Captain Charles Butler McVay's account of the sinking and the ensuing ordeal, Stanton presents the story with an immediacy and intimacy that makes it all the more terrible.
The men of the Indianapolis were the victims of an entire series of oversights and foul ups, few of their own making. First, the ship had just delivered components of the Little Boy atomic bomb (which was dropped on Hiroshima), and so had been traveling in great secrecy. Then when they set out from Guam to join up with Task Force 95 at Okinawa, they sailed alone and were not warned about known Japanese submarine activity, for security reasons. Thus, when the submarine I-58, commanded by Mochitsura Hashimoto, torpedoed them, they didn't even realize what had happened at first.
From there, unfortunate coincidence turns to bitter irony and real tragedy. Damage to the radio rooms was so great and the ship sank so fast, that they did not get a chance to radio for help. Meanwhile, again for security reasons, port authorities had been ordered not to relay messages every time a ship arrived and had interpreted the order to mean that they shouldn't report non-arrivals either. Of the 1196 men on board, 300 probably died immediately, but while the other 900 struggled in the water, no one yet knew of their dilemma.
Eventually sharks, salt water, hypothermia, injuries sustained in the sinking, fights among the men, and a host of other maladies, left just 321 men alive to be rescued, four of whom died almost immediately. Stanton renders the crew's five day holocaust in heart breaking detail, with much of the narrative supplied by ship's doctor Lewis Haynes and Private Giles McCoy. Finally, as even these stalwart souls were preparing to give up, they were discovered by Lieutenant Commander George Atteberry in a Ventura bomber, which could do little more than drop some supplies and radio for help. He was followed by Lieutenant Adrian Marks in a PBY-5A Catalina, which Marks heroically set down in the water. Marks and a few succeeding planes were able to start picking up the survivors while they waited for rescue ships to reach the scene.
One would think that the awful story had run its course at that point, but the Navy added insult to tragedy by court-martialing Captain McVay, the only captain to that point in US Naval history to be court-martialed for losing being sunk. The Navy, pretty clearly trying to avoid admitting its own mistakes, failed to share much information which would have been helpful to his defense and took the extraordinary step of summoning Commander Hashimoto to testify about the incident. The prosecution's theory of the case was that McVay's failure to zig-zag had been responsible for the sinking, and, despite contrary testimony from both Hashimoto and the prosecution's own expert witness on this issue, he was convicted.
In the succeeding years crew members gathered for reunions (organized by McCoy) and worked to clear McVay's name. These efforts went for naught until a High School student in Florida, working on a class project, got involved. On October 12, 2000, Congress passed an amendment exonerating McVay and recommending citations for the crew. It was too late for McVay though, he had killed himself in 1968.
This is a terrific book, filled with all the drama you could ever ask for, remarkable moments of human endurance and despair, stupidity and loyalty, heroism and despair. I'm not big on all of the current Greatest Generation stuff, but there is something to the idea that the shared experience of war (and Depression) that this generation shared somehow gives them a common identity and a sense of accomplishment that their successors have lacked. The men of the USS Indianapolis and particularly their captain, Charles McVay, are deserving of our respect and their story should never be forgotten. Doug Stanton's book makes it a painful pleasure to remember the sacrifices they made.
GRADE : AIn Harm's Way: The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis and the Extraordinary Story of Its Survivors Overview

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Chanel: A Woman of her Own Review

Chanel: A Woman of her Own
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Chanel: A Woman of her Own ReviewI found it strange that some readers gave negative or highly critical reviews of this biography. Someone even commented on the difficulty in reading the French names! It's a little late to change Chanel's nationality and thank God! This biography is successful on a number of levels but primarily two: it recounts the fascinating life, in great detail, of the late Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel and it puts her professional contribution to the world in context. On a personal level, her life-story reads as a Dickens novel. Her's is a truly "rags-to-riches" story. Chanel was a woman who created a life and a legend against the odds. She was one of those rare and stunning creatures rising from practically nothing to become a household name. Her family was destitute. Her father abandoned her at an orphanage. Her attempts in music and theatre came to nothing. Her sewing skills were atrocious! Only after a young gentleman named Balsan recognized her talent through her unconventional beauty did her true potential begin to emerge. Chanel knew all of the greatest people of her age: Stravinsky, Cocteau, Dali, Misia Sert, and the Duke of Westminster, among others. Many of these people she knew intimately. How tragic that even after these acquaintances and global successes as a designer, Chanel never really found success in love. Professionally, the impact of her designs are still with us today and influencing generations of new designers and artists. From a perspective of fashion, Chanel almost single-handedly pulled the 19th century world into the modern age by pulling women out of corsets and sliding them into pants. The "little black dress" and classic Chanel suit are not only articles of clothing, they are timeless works of art. Madsen has succeeded in writing a biography that does not fall short as other books on Chanel have in the past. His biography begins BEFORE her birth and continues on AFTER her death. He explores her roots and discusses the ongoing impact of her life, while filling in all the opulent details in between. If you want to know who Chanel was and why she is still so important today, pick up this book. Now if they would only do a feature film treatment!Chanel: A Woman of her Own Overview

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Heinrich Himmler: The Sinister Life of the Head of the SS and Gestapo Review

Heinrich Himmler: The Sinister Life of the Head of the SS and Gestapo
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Heinrich Himmler: The Sinister Life of the Head of the SS and Gestapo ReviewManvell and Fraenkel's compelling biography of the life and death of Heinrich Himmler is a masterful attempt at understanding a pivotal figure in the unrelenting horror story of the third reich. One of the most effective methods they use to do this is their reliance on the recollections of Felix Kersten, Himmler's personal masseur, as well as those of Kersten's wife.
Himmler was so impressed by Kersten's ability to relieve his constant stomach pains through his legendary massage skills that he forced Kersten to become his own personal masseur, and by default, his personal conscience and father confessor. Kersten was able to argue with Himmler against genocide and even to get "favors" from Himmler, including saving friends and even Jews from the maws of the Nazi death machine. Himmler explicitly recognized this trade off, even crediting Kersten with his comment that "Kersten massages a life out of me with every rub".
In the period following the D-day invasion, as the eventual defeat of the nazi regime became increasingly evident, even to Himmler, Kersten was even able to subtly influence Himmler by playing upon what remained of a conscience and his fears of eventually being charged as a war criminal, and convinced Himmler to meet with Norbert Masur, director of the Swedish sector of the World Jewish Congress in order to negotiate the release from the death camp, Ravensbruck, of "a thousand Jewish women for evacuation to Sweden, under the cover of their being of Polish origin. Himmler was still openly afraid that Hitler might discover what he was doing." Himmler also explored channels, through contacts via Kersten, the possibility of negotiating a separate peace with the West (as opposed to Russia) should Hitler be deposed or die.
This biography is particularly fascinating during this phase when Himmler tries to justify the Nazi regime's "anti-Jewish" policies while at the same time trying to build some semblance of an image as someone who "tried" to end the slaughter and a "trust-worthy" potential successor to Hitler. Throughout the biography the reader is given repeated insights into the character, or lack thereof, of this bureaucrat who instituted the most highly organized and systematically evil mass extermination in the history of humankind. If you want to understand Himmler, this is a must book.
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