Prisoner of the Samurai : Surviving the Sinking of the USS Houston and the Death Railway by Rosalie H. Smith and James Gee (2018, Hardcover)

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About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherCase Mate Publishers & Book Distributors, LLC
ISBN-101612005977
ISBN-139781612005973
eBay Product ID (ePID)242518646

Product Key Features

Book TitlePrisoner of the Samurai : Surviving the Sinking of the Uss Houston and the Death Railway
Number of Pages196 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication Year2018
TopicMilitary / World War II, Military / General, General, Military
IllustratorYes
GenreBiography & Autobiography, History
AuthorRosalie H. Smith, James Gee
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Length9 in
Item Width6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
ReviewsPrisoner of the Samurai is a riveting and invaluable addition to military biography and world history collections, and highly recommended for both public and college libraries., It is right that the modern generation should have this harrowing reminder of the loathsome, cowardly, barbarous, sadistic behaviour of the Japanese towards their weak, sick, starving, defenceless prisoners, for which there has been no acknowledgement, let alone atonement. Thousands died, entirely avoidably. James Gee survived to tell his tale. It is our 21st century duty to read it., What is unique, perhaps, is the fact that this extraordinary book was enticed out of Gee's mouth and formed into a remarkably frank and open ccount of his experiences by a nurse at Guantanamo Bay after his release. Harrowing and inspiring at the same time., The book is striking for its portrayal of the extremes of mankind, from the supreme self-sacrifice of some prisoners to the supreme self-interest of others...an absorbing tribute to the human spirit., ...a harrowing look inside the POW camps in the South Pacific, told by a young, impressionable soldier who survived them.... It's an eye-opening read, to be sure, one that brings the worst of war and the best of humanity to light all at once.
Table Of ContentEditor's Note 1. The Honor 2. "My Mama Nice Virgin" 3. Battle of the Flores Sea 4. Battle of the Java Sea 5. "No Enemy Ships in the Straits" 6. Samurai Hospitality 7. Serang, Java: Not Even a Chancre Mechanic 8. Batavia, Java: You Can Take the Man Out of Texas 9. Fourth of July, 1942 10. To the Land of Milk and Honey 11. Moulmein Jail 12. Workin' on the Railroad 13. 30 Kilo Camp: Creative Writing, Japanese-style 14. 64 Kilo Camp: Jesus Wept 15. Kyushu Coal-mining 16. "You Must Learn to Run!" 17. Home Epilogue
SynopsisMoving account of the experiences of James Gee, USMC, a survivor of the USS Houston, who was captured and held as a prisoner of war by the Japanese for three and a half years., James Gee was fresh out of college at the University of Texas and making plans for his future when World War II interrupted these happy pursuits. He and his friends joined the U.S. Marine Corps in 1940 and after training he was posted to the U.S.S. Houston. At first, assignments in Hawaii, Guam and the Philippines--whilst instructing him in the rough and tumble of crew life--were free of encounters with the enemy. But then in 1942 the Houston was first attacked during the battle of the Flores Sea and subsequently sunk by the Japanese fleet during the battle of the Java Sea. Witnessing the last moments of the great ship, Gee survived a prolonged period in the sea clinging to a makeshift raft, before being picked up by a Japanese ship. But this was just the beginning of his ordeal. Initially held prisoner in Java and forced to load and unload enemy ships, he was then transferred to Burma where he worked on the notorious "death railway," living on the banks of the River Kwai. Those who survived the hard labor and harsh conditions there would be sent on to Thailand, then Singapore before arriving in Japan in 1945. There, they spent the last few months of the war working in coal mines just 40 miles outside Nagasaki. The dire circumstances of Gee's incarceration were only overcome through the compassion and companionship of fellow detainees and his determination to endure. After his liberation, he was sent to Guantanamo Bay Naval Hospital, Cuba. There, he encountered Rosalie Hamric Smith R.N., who was serving as Charge Nurse in the Psychiatric Ward, and who helped him to record his experiences as part of his treatment. Rosalie worked his accounts into a manuscript which, following her sudden death, languished in an attic for over thirty years. Now rediscovered, James Gee's incredible story can be told to a new generation.
LC Classification NumberD811

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