
The events on the morning of the Attack on Pearl Harbor left America in a state of numb shock. When the Japanese Navy attacked Manila and Clark Field in the Philippines eight hours later, it went essentially unnoticed by American news outlets, and was therefore neglected by history.
For the many thousands of men who fought and died there so long ago, and the ones who spent the war imprisoned, tortured, or laboring as slaves of the emperor, it wasn’t so easy to forget.
For Carlos Montoya, the attack was only the
beginning...
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“Excellent. Well written and gives a great insight on what was going
on during that time in the Philippines.”
—Prudence Price, Italian Catholic Federation
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“Extremely vivid narrative. Gives readers a very, very good visual look
at a time and place, as well as a war situation (the POW camps).
Polished, and at times, extremely powerful.”
—Mike Foley, Writer’s Review
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I had seven brothers in World War II. One of them returned
with Malaria and another is in a care center after suffering from
a stroke. After all these years he is still fighting the war.
You will never fully realize what these soldiers went through
until you read this book.”
—Katie Walter