Hiroshima Nagasaki: The Real Story of the Atomic Bombings and Their Aftermath

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Macmillan, Aug 5, 2014 - History - 629 pages

In this harrowing history of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, Paul Ham argues against the use of nuclear weapons, drawing on extensive research and hundreds of interviews to prove that the bombings had little impact on the eventual outcome of the Pacific War. More than 100,000 people were killed instantly by the atomic bombs, mostly women, children, and the elderly. Many hundreds of thousands more succumbed to their horrific injuries later, or slowly perished of radiation-related sickness.

Yet American leaders claimed the bombs were "our least abhorrent choice"—and still today most people believe they ended the Pacific War and saved millions of American and Japanese lives. In this gripping narrative, Ham demonstrates convincingly that misunderstandings and nationalist fury on both sides led to the use of the bombs. Ham also gives powerful witness to its destruction through the eyes of eighty survivors, from twelve-year-olds forced to work in war factories to wives and children who faced the holocaust alone.

Hiroshima Nagasaki presents the grisly unadorned truth about the bombings, blurred for so long by postwar propaganda, and transforms our understanding of one of the defining events of the twentieth century.

 

Contents

1 WINTER 1945
1
2 TWO CITIES
26
3 FEUERSTURM
47
4 PRESIDENT
68
5 ATOM
87
6 THE MANHATTAN PROJECT
105
7 SPRING 1945
131
8 THE TARGET COMMITTEE
147
14 SUMMER 1945
267
15 TINIAN ISLAND
278
16 AUGUSTA
301
17 HIROSHIMA 6 August 1945
315
18 INVASION
339
19 NAGASAKI 9 August 1945
357
20 SURRENDER
380
21 RECKONING
407

9 JAPAN DEFEATED
166
10 UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER
190
11 TRINITY
210
12 POTSDAM
230
13 MOKUSATSU
251
22 HIBAKUSHA
432
23 WHY
459
EPILOGUE DEAD HEAT
488
Endmatter
511
Copyright

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About the author (2014)

Paul Ham is an Australian historian, journalist and author, He was born in Sydney, Australia in 1960. He earned his master's degree in economic history from the London School of Economics. He began working for the London Sunday Times in 1998 as their Australia correspondent. He is the author of Kokoda (2004), Vietnam: The Australian War (2007), Hiroshima Nagasaki (2011), Sandakan: The Untold Story of the Sandakan Death Marches (2012), 1914: The Year the World Ended (2013), and Passchendaele: Requiem for Doomed Youth (2017). He won the Queensland Literary Award for Non-Fiction in 2014 for his work, 1914: The Year the World Ended. He also received the 2018 NSW Premier's Literary Awards, Douglas Stewart Prize for Nonfiction for Passchendaele: Requiem for Doomed Youth. His other work includes 1913, The Target Committee, and Honey, We Forgot the Kids (co-authored with psychotherapist Bernie Brown).

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