No published collection of
first-person oral histories encompasses so many diverse aspects of World WarII in the Pacific-in
gripping, eyewitness accounts from more than seventy veterans of all branches of service. In their
own evocative words, veterans who fought for their lives against the Japanese Empire some sixty years
ago now think back on the terrifying, perilous, exotic, life-altering events that made up their
wartime experiences. What they saw and lived through has stayed with them their entire lives, and
much of it comes to the surface again through their vivid memories.
These are not the stories of
sweeping military strategies or bold tactical moves by generals and
admirals. Instead, we hear mainly from those on the lower rungs of the military ladder, from ordinary
seamen on vessels that encountered Japanese warships and planes and sometimes came out
second-best, from rank-and-file Marines who in amtracs churning toward bullet-swept tropical
beaches saw buddies killed right next to them, and from startled eyewitnesses to the war's sudden beginning
on December 7, 1941.
Pacific War Stories is a unique book of stirring,
first-hand accounts from front-line combat at the epicenter of violence and death to restless weariness on
rear area islands thousands of miles from the fighting to chilling aerial encounters with the
dreaded Japanese Zero. Fortunately, these compelling stories were collected before it became too
late, for they cover myriad aspects of what it was like to have lived through the war in the Pacific, a
war fought on countless islands scattered over an area constituting one-third of the globe.
From Pacific War Stories dust jacket.
© 2004 Abbeville Press