
Purchase
The Story of the USS Bunker Hill and the Kamikaze Pilot Who Crippled Her
Simon & Schuster
November 2008
On Sale: November 11, 2008
528 pages ISBN: 0743260805 EAN: 9780743260800 Hardcover
Add to Wish List
Non-Fiction
In the closing months of World War II, Americans found
themselves facing a new and terrifying weapon: kamikazes --
the first men to use airplanes as suicide weapons. By the beginning of 1945, American pilots were shooting down
Japanese planes more than ten to one. The Japanese had so
few metals left that the military had begun using wooden
coins and clay pots for hand grenades. For the first time in
800 years, Japan faced imminent invasion. As Germany
faltered, the combined strength of every warring nation
gathered at Japan's door. Desperate, Japan turned to its
most idealistic young men -- the best and brightest college
students -- and demanded of them the greatest sacrifice. On the morning of May 11, 1945, days after the Nazi
surrender, the USS Bunker Hill -- a magnificent vessel that
held thousands of crewmen and the most sophisticated naval
technology available -- was holding at the Pacific Theater,
70 miles off the coast of Okinawa. At precisely 9:58 a.m., Kiyoshi Ogawa radioed in to his base
at Kanoya, 350 miles from the Bunker Hill, "I found the
enemy vessels." After eighteen months of training, Kiyoshi
tucked a comrade's poem into his breast pocket and flew his
Zero five hours across the Pacific. Now the young Japanese
pilot had located his target and was on the verge of
fulfilling his destiny. At 10:02.30 a.m., as he hovered
above the Bunker Hill, hidden in a mass of clouds, Kiyoshi
spoke his last words: "Now, I am nose-diving into the ship." The attack killed 393 Americans and was the worst suicide
attack against America until September 11. Juxtaposing
Kiyoshi's story with the stories of untold heroism of the
men aboard the Bunker Hill, Maxwell Taylor Kennedy details
how American sailors and airmen worked together, risking
their own lives to save their fellows and ultimately
triumphing in their efforts to save their ship. Drawing on years of research and firsthand interviews with
both American and Japanese survivors, Maxwell Taylor Kennedy
draws a gripping portrait of men bravely serving their
countries in war and the advent of a terrifying new weapon,
suicide bombing, that nearly halted the most powerful nation
in the world.
No awards found for this book.
Comments
No comments posted.
Registered users may leave comments.
Log in or register now!
|