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desertcart.com: Ghost Soldiers: The Epic Account of World War II's Greatest Rescue Mission: 9780385495653: Sides, Hampton: Books Review: Great historical rescue of POWs Bataan WW2 from Japanese prison camp. - Hampton Sides has wrote a great historical true story of the US Army Rangers, scouts and Filipino resistance fighters rescuing POWs captured at Bataan and others from the monstrous horrible Japanese prison/death camp Cabanaantuan in WW2 Philippines. The 342 page book was a page burner, exciting and extremely informative. The reader has an enjoyable learning experience that is exciting and fast paced. No boring parts. I read it in 2 days. Could not put it down. The reader learns about the Bataan death march and how the US prisoners and a few foreigners were tortured, used as slave labor, given almost no food ( a little rice now and then. They killed and ate what small animals they could ( rats, snakes etc...later they were able to grow vegetables in a garden)and allowed to get all kinds of diseases and vitamin deficiencies. Their bodies are recked with diseases from many parasites and dysentery from human and animal feces and urine contact. Almost no sanitation facilities. We see the Japanese as cruel monsters that killed some of the prisoners for pleasure and thought of them as non humans. Killing and torture are the norm. Hampton does show a very few Japanese that treated the prisoners with a slight degree of compassion. The US Army is in full swing with MacArthur and soldiers returning and taking back the Philippines with Filipino resistance fighter help. Because of this we see the Japanese taking over a thousand of the prisoners out of the prison camp to be shipped to Japan as slaves. The rest of the prisoners are non productive with many diseases and unable to work. US intelligence believes the remainder of the prisoners will be executed. We see a spy "High Pockets" an American women working at her bar/dance establishment giving US intelligence information about Japanese ship movements and troop placements. The prisoners had been in prison three years and they believed America had forgotten them, until the Rangers break into the camp to save them. A group of US Army rangers led by Lt. Colonial Mucci and Captain Prince with the help from scouts and Filipino resistance fighters storm the camp, kill the remaining Japanese there and free the prisoners. We see the firefight and the over 15 mile trip toward US lines using Philippine cattle and carts to carry the men that can not walk. Many of the saved POW weigh only 100 lbs and have lost their teeth, hair,eye sight, and have sores all over their bodies with different disabilities due to disease, parasites and vitamin deficiency. They are walking and non walking skeletons. I won't ruin the ending. Just say that the reader will get a deep empathy with the tortured prisoners and really praise the Rangers, scouts and Filipino resistance fighters for saving them. This is a true WW2 story and a history that should be shown so all will remember the atrocities committed on POWs. This has happened before and after. Will humankind ever stop the inhuman treatment of POWs, end wars forever or is it in the inner nature of humankind to kill each other? A very enlightening book. 5 stars Review: Spectacular - Having just read the author's "In the Kingdom of Ice" and enjoyed it immensely, turning to one of his earlier works, and especially one so well received, was an easy choice. "Ghost Soldiers" shows Sides at his historical and even sociological best, bringing a well beyond horrifying story that began early in WWII and lasted for years to light. This is not just a book for history buffs or war story readers, this is one for everyone who cares for America and where it has been. It is also a book for anyone who could use some additional inspiration, a reason to get up in the morning, a vision of courage and leadership and survival. The Bataan Death March has been fairly well documented over the years but what brings this book to the fore is the mesmerizing tale of the valiant rescue of several hundred survivors near the end of the war, U.S., British and others, who by most accounts should have died long before at the torturing hands of their sadistic and monstrous captors, The Imperial Japanese Army. As bad as the Germans were, the Japanese were never to be outdone in the cruelty department. It began deep in their culture and could be witnessed in their attitude toward surrender, captivity status, and even the training of their own soldiers, sailors and airmen. Fighter pilots, for example, were subject to brutal training regimens at the hands of their own Japanese instructors and woe to any student who seemed unmotivated or who missed a test question-- students were routinely bludgeoned, often to the point of unconsciousness. Allied POW's, not to mention many thousands of native Filipinos, were treated so inhumanely by the Japanese as to all but defy description, but this is precisely what Sides does so well. The rescue of the Bataan survivors very nearly came too late, but I can't imagine many of them would have said that at the time of their release from captivity. Sides' research and writing are brilliant as always. He is a national treasure who goes well beyond the boundaries of historical excellence. This is a book for the ages. If I had my way, Japanese students would all read it, too.



| Best Sellers Rank | #7,817 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1 in Philippines History #13 in WWII Biographies #38 in World War II History (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (8,609) |
| Dimensions | 5.2 x 0.8 x 8 inches |
| ISBN-10 | 038549565X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0385495653 |
| Item Weight | 12 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 384 pages |
| Publication date | May 7, 2002 |
| Publisher | Vintage |
T**N
Great historical rescue of POWs Bataan WW2 from Japanese prison camp.
Hampton Sides has wrote a great historical true story of the US Army Rangers, scouts and Filipino resistance fighters rescuing POWs captured at Bataan and others from the monstrous horrible Japanese prison/death camp Cabanaantuan in WW2 Philippines. The 342 page book was a page burner, exciting and extremely informative. The reader has an enjoyable learning experience that is exciting and fast paced. No boring parts. I read it in 2 days. Could not put it down. The reader learns about the Bataan death march and how the US prisoners and a few foreigners were tortured, used as slave labor, given almost no food ( a little rice now and then. They killed and ate what small animals they could ( rats, snakes etc...later they were able to grow vegetables in a garden)and allowed to get all kinds of diseases and vitamin deficiencies. Their bodies are recked with diseases from many parasites and dysentery from human and animal feces and urine contact. Almost no sanitation facilities. We see the Japanese as cruel monsters that killed some of the prisoners for pleasure and thought of them as non humans. Killing and torture are the norm. Hampton does show a very few Japanese that treated the prisoners with a slight degree of compassion. The US Army is in full swing with MacArthur and soldiers returning and taking back the Philippines with Filipino resistance fighter help. Because of this we see the Japanese taking over a thousand of the prisoners out of the prison camp to be shipped to Japan as slaves. The rest of the prisoners are non productive with many diseases and unable to work. US intelligence believes the remainder of the prisoners will be executed. We see a spy "High Pockets" an American women working at her bar/dance establishment giving US intelligence information about Japanese ship movements and troop placements. The prisoners had been in prison three years and they believed America had forgotten them, until the Rangers break into the camp to save them. A group of US Army rangers led by Lt. Colonial Mucci and Captain Prince with the help from scouts and Filipino resistance fighters storm the camp, kill the remaining Japanese there and free the prisoners. We see the firefight and the over 15 mile trip toward US lines using Philippine cattle and carts to carry the men that can not walk. Many of the saved POW weigh only 100 lbs and have lost their teeth, hair,eye sight, and have sores all over their bodies with different disabilities due to disease, parasites and vitamin deficiency. They are walking and non walking skeletons. I won't ruin the ending. Just say that the reader will get a deep empathy with the tortured prisoners and really praise the Rangers, scouts and Filipino resistance fighters for saving them. This is a true WW2 story and a history that should be shown so all will remember the atrocities committed on POWs. This has happened before and after. Will humankind ever stop the inhuman treatment of POWs, end wars forever or is it in the inner nature of humankind to kill each other? A very enlightening book. 5 stars
J**O
Spectacular
Having just read the author's "In the Kingdom of Ice" and enjoyed it immensely, turning to one of his earlier works, and especially one so well received, was an easy choice. "Ghost Soldiers" shows Sides at his historical and even sociological best, bringing a well beyond horrifying story that began early in WWII and lasted for years to light. This is not just a book for history buffs or war story readers, this is one for everyone who cares for America and where it has been. It is also a book for anyone who could use some additional inspiration, a reason to get up in the morning, a vision of courage and leadership and survival. The Bataan Death March has been fairly well documented over the years but what brings this book to the fore is the mesmerizing tale of the valiant rescue of several hundred survivors near the end of the war, U.S., British and others, who by most accounts should have died long before at the torturing hands of their sadistic and monstrous captors, The Imperial Japanese Army. As bad as the Germans were, the Japanese were never to be outdone in the cruelty department. It began deep in their culture and could be witnessed in their attitude toward surrender, captivity status, and even the training of their own soldiers, sailors and airmen. Fighter pilots, for example, were subject to brutal training regimens at the hands of their own Japanese instructors and woe to any student who seemed unmotivated or who missed a test question-- students were routinely bludgeoned, often to the point of unconsciousness. Allied POW's, not to mention many thousands of native Filipinos, were treated so inhumanely by the Japanese as to all but defy description, but this is precisely what Sides does so well. The rescue of the Bataan survivors very nearly came too late, but I can't imagine many of them would have said that at the time of their release from captivity. Sides' research and writing are brilliant as always. He is a national treasure who goes well beyond the boundaries of historical excellence. This is a book for the ages. If I had my way, Japanese students would all read it, too.
W**R
Great WWII History
Ghost Soldiers is the story of the battle for the Philippines during WWII, focusing particularly on the Bataan Death March and a Japanese POW camp rescue mission. This is great WWII history; well researched, well written and easy to understand. The author covers the whole Philippine theatre of the war and explains in detail: -- the reasons for General MacArthur’s retreat from The Philippines to Australia when threatened by Japanese invasion -- the Japanese command’s strategy for Philippine invasion, particularly Manila with its American forces at Battan and the island fortress of Corregidor in Manila Bay -- the reasons for the American surrender at Battan -- the Japanese initial reasoning for marching the POWs away from Battan and why it turned into a death march -- Japanese inhumane treatment of American POWs -- the horrible conditions inside Japanese POW camps -- the formation of the first Army Special Forces Ranger unit and its successful POW camp rescue (augmented by Philippine resistance fighters) These stories (particularly the ‘death march’ stories and the POW camp rescue) are riveting and heart rendering accounts which were masterfully woven together from historical records and personal memoirs of the soldiers involved. This is an excellent book. Highly recommended for WWII history buffs.
J**N
Ghost Soldiers - an amazing, historic accounting of survival and rescue during war with Japan.
Excellent book for the WWII history lover. Describes a brutal point in our war with Japan. Also captures the heroic introduction of the Army Rangers.
B**B
Nonfiction history
Easy read by this author NM
J**.
Great book, poor quality binding
Excellent book, poor quality binding - many pages fell out about half way through reading
W**S
This book is fab it could B a blockbuster film it is as good a book as I hav read
C**S
An awesome account of just one small episode of the war between the U.S. and Japan during WW2. It is probably the best written true story account of a single WW2 action I have ever read! It documents of how a relatively small group of U.S. Military Rangers, in spite of great enemy odds against them, captured an entire P.O.W. camp and rescued over 600 U.S. and allied personnell. And they did it with a bare minimum of casualties to themselves or to those being rescued while inflicting huge losses on the enemy! The story also gives full credit to those of the local population who assisted the rescuers in their mission as well as to those rescued! It should be a must read by everyone as it recounts the best of mankind in a time when mankind was at its worse! I guarantee, read the first paragraph and you'll not put the book down until you've read the last sentence of the last paragraph of the book! Yes, it is written that inspiring and that good! To the few soldiers who willingly paid the supreme price in this heroic effort I say, "Greater love hath no man than he who lays down his life for his friends!" God bless them one and all, rescuers and rescued!
P**N
It's a good book. in the beginning it gets confusing, especially if you are not tracking dates. But overall, a good write-up on Pacific war. Worth reading
D**Y
Interesting read.
D**T
The book was in mint condition and the story was very well written. I finished it in one sitting.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 day ago