Private Yokoi's War and Life on Guam, 1944-1972
The Story of the Japanese Imperial Army's Longest WWII Survivor in the Field and Later Life
Biographical note
Omi Hatashin, one of Yokoi’s nephews by marriage, was born in Kyoto, took his first degree in Tokyo, followed by his PhD in England, and was called to the English Bar in 2003. Associated with St. Antony’s College, Oxford, for a number of years, he writes on human rights and criminal justice in practice in Japan, corporate disasters and culture, as well as issues of comparative law and history.
Readership
General/trade
Table of contents
Chronology; List of Plates, Introduction; 1 Early days; 2 To where are we going to be posted?; 3 'Deployment' in Guam; 4 The US invasion: 'Attack the Americans and die!'; 5 The last days of our platoon; 6 'Survival war' in the jungle: 'Don't rush to die. The Japanese army is coming to rescue us'; 7 'Japan has surrendered, come out'; 8 'We shall never surrender'; 9 'I shall survive on my own'; 10 Tailoring from tree fibres: The empire will strike back in a decade'; 11 'No way to survive but to hide us underground'; 12 'How to get off Guam?'; 13 The death of my last colleagues; 14 Eight years in solitude; 15 Factors in my survival; 16 Discovery: 'No one shall remain alive to incur the shame of becoming a prisoner of war'; 17 Epilogue: Being thankful for this day in order the better to arrive at tomorrow
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