Iwo Jima
World War II Veterans Remember the Greatest Battle of the Pacific
Format:Paperback
Publisher:WW Norton & Co
Published:17th Jul '09
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
On February 19, 1945, nearly 70,000 American soldiers invaded a tiny volcanic island in the Pacific. Over the next thirty-five days, approximately 28,000 soldiers died, including nearly 22,000 Japanese and 6,821 Americans, making Iwo Jima one of the costliest battles of World War II. In his most important work to date, best-selling author Larry Smith lets twenty-two veterans of the conflict tell the story of this epic clash in their own words.
Many of these soldiers were no more than teenagers when they answered their country’s call, and yet the men relate the momentous events of this terrible conflict as if they occurred just last year, instead of more than half a century ago. Describing the initial charge across the treacherous black ash of the landing beach under heavy fire is Chuck Lindberg, the last survivor of the two teams that planted the flags on Mount Suribachi—a moment captured forever in Joe Rosenthal’s iconic photograph for the Associated Press. General Fred Haynes recounts his heroic attempts to keep order amid tremendous casualties on the battlefield. Woody Williams and George Wahlen, two of the battle’s twenty-six Medal of Honor recipients, tell their unbelievable stories, and Samuel Tso relates his role as one of the famous Navajo code talkers.
Though the flags went up just days after the invasion, the fighting wasn’t over: through nearly eight miles of tunnels, thousands of Japanese troops defended the island despite hundred-degree heat, famine rations, and the overpowering stench of sulfur. To get both sides of the story, Smith interviewed the daughter of Captain Tsunezo Wachi, one of the most prominent Japanese survivors, and presents new evidence about the disappearance of the famed Japanese commander Lieutenant General Tadamichi Kuribayashi, who waged a brilliant defense of the island only to allegedly commit suicide rather than submit to the Americans.
Smith also investigates the controversy surrounding Rosenthal’s famous photograph of the flag raising, and he interviews bomber and fighter crewmen to hear firsthand whether they believed the terrible cost of capturing the island was truly justified by its strategic use as an emergency stop for B-29 Superfortress bombers. Through the story of Navy Cross recipient John Ripley, Smith brings the history of the island up-to-date—from its return to Japan in 1968 to the...
"Iwo Jima is by turns poignant and powerful, inspiring and sobering. This is a superb and fascinating work by one of our nation’s leading oral historians." -- Jay Winik, author of April 1865 and The Great Upheaval: America and the Birth of the Modern World
"A superb reporter revisits Iwo Jima through the men who actually fought there and how they remembered their time in Hell." -- James Brady, author of Why Marines Fight
"Nobody can get warriors to share their heroic stories better than Larry Smith." -- Jack Jacobs, MSNBC commentator and Medal of Honor recipient, Vietnam
"Page after page of compelling stories unfold in Larry Smith’s brilliant oral history, Iwo Jima. The tales of valor and humanity, as told by veterans of the battle, reveal the magnitude of their remarkable accomplishment during this pivotal campaign of the Pacific war. This is neither a statistical account nor a mere catalog of the ships. Rather, it is a dramatic portrait of ordinary men confronting and surviving extraordinary events, all in their own words." -- Walter Anderson
"Smith has cast his net widely and generated interviews with a wide range of veterans, so his book affords a broader-than-usual view of the battle…Eminently readable and historiographically useful" -- Booklist
ISBN: 9780393334913
Dimensions: 236mm x 157mm x 28mm
Weight: 576g
374 pages