excellent telling of the end stages of WWII in the Pacific, you feel as though you are in the leaders shoes,
When I approached the reading of this book I was afraid it would contain so many boring facts and figures, but to my delight, ¿The Final Storm¿ is not bogged down by anything. It is a great story that begins on February 21, 1945 as WWII is concentrated on the battle for Japan and all the islands that nation controlled. The author tells this excellently written book through the eyes of many involved in the war on land, sea, and in the air, both Allies and Japanese views with no holds barred. From the attackers themselves on both sides to those living on Japanese controlled territories, be they civilians, military, or prisoners of war. The Japanese gave no mercy to prisoners of war as well as their own citizens, not caring where they were contained ion or near dangerous battle locations. Japanese submariners had dwindled to few by this time of the war but those few left had to be watched as they tried to torpedo and sink any of the ships bringing supplies, food, ammunition, and fighting men to where they were needed. American submarine commanders were working hard to clear the area of any Japanese ships so the allied ships could deliver those much needed men and supplies. Allied airplanes also were very active as they cleared the seas and the air of Japanese opposition. Many leaders who were known at the time had their shared duties explained to the reader. Men of both sides of the war give the reader the story of the war as they saw it and lived it. You feel as though you are living the war through the actions and lives of admirals, officers, presidents, prime ministers, military and civilian doctors, field marshals, non-commissioned officers, pilots, families of all of them, whether they were Japanese, Americans, or other nations involved in the war. You slosh through the jungles, fly in the airplanes, fighter planes or bombers, try to stay alive as a P.O.W., avoiding capture when possible knowing torture was ahead if the Japanese did capture you, travel in the ships whether part of a crew, men traveling to go to war, or commanding the ship trying to avoid attack and being sunk. The brutal demanding battle for the various Japanese islands took time, never knowing what resistance you would face. On many of those islands the Japanese defenders had built systems of caves so all the bombing or shelling from the off shore ships would not kill or wound most of them. You live the experience of attacking those islands never knowing if there was a Jap hiding in plain site that would kill you before you knew his existence. Grenades, machine guns, rifles, flame throwers, B.A.R.¿s (a very heavy rifle), bayonets, handguns, and hand-to-hand combat in some situations, or anything that could be used as a weapon against each other. Tanks also were a strong weapon for and against both sides. The weather many times determined which weapons could be used. You must read this book to get the full feeling that I got while reading it. The battles continued even as the Japanese appeared defeated since they would just not stop. They fought to the death. The action that finally stopped the war was the use of the atomic bomb. You also live through those decisions through the many leaders that determined whether to use that killing weapon or continue fighting by landing huge amounts of men on the Japanese shore where both sides would have lost possibly millions more lives. A great book. Don¿t miss reading it.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback.
Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.