THE HELL SHIPS OF WORLD WAR II

Allied Prisoners, Death Voyages, and Survival in the Pacific War
542 Seiten, Taschenbuch
€ 35,80
-
+
Lieferung in 7-14 Werktagen

Bitte haben Sie einen Moment Geduld, wir legen Ihr Produkt in den Warenkorb.

Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

They survived capture-only to be imprisoned aboard ships designed for death.During the Second World War, tens of thousands of Allied prisoners of war and civilian internees were transported across the Japanese Empire aboard vessels that became known as hell ships.Packed into dark, airless cargo holds, the prisoners endured suffocating heat, starvation, disease, dehydration, beatings, and conditions so overcrowded that men could barely sit or breathe. There were few toilets, almost no medical supplies, and little hope of escape.Yet the greatest danger often came from above.Because many of these ships carried no markings identifying them as prisoner transports, Allied submarines and aircraft attacked them without knowing that their own countrymen were trapped below deck. Ships such as the Jun'yō Maru, Arisan Maru, Ōryoku Maru, Rakuyō Maru, Lisbon Maru, and Hōfuku Maru became scenes of enormous loss of life.The Hell Ships of World War II: Allied Prisoners, Death Voyages, and Survival in the Pacific War tells the story of these forgotten voyages through historical accounts, survivor testimony, and the experiences of the men who endured them.Inside this book, you will discover: - How Japan transported prisoners throughout its wartime empire- Why prisoners were confined in dangerous and inhumane cargo holds- The stories of the most notorious hell ships- How Allied submarines unknowingly sank ships carrying fellow servicemen- The desperate struggles of prisoners trapped below deck- Accounts of escape, rescue, sacrifice, and survival- The forced-labor camps awaiting those who reached their destinations- The search for responsibility after the war- How survivors lived with the physical and emotional consequences- Why the tragedy of the hell ships remains largely unknown todayThis is not only a history of ships and wartime strategy. It is the story of ordinary men placed in extraordinary circumstances-men who shared their last drops of water, helped wounded companions, fought their way out of sinking vessels, and refused to surrender their humanity.For readers interested in the Pacific War, prisoners of war, Japanese wartime history, naval disasters, military survival, and forgotten events of World War II, this book reveals one of the conflict's darkest and most powerful chapters.Their ships were unmarked.Their suffering was hidden.Their stories must not be forgotten.