| Hellfire
Pass |
| Cameron
Forbes |
| Pan
Macmillian Australia |
| 480
pages, $45.00 |
|
 |
Unstoppable
but hellish read
UNDOUBTEDLY
one of the best books Ive ever read on the Thai
Burma railway and the plight of prisoners of the Japanese
during World War II.
Drawn on 50 first-person interviews conducted in Australia,
Japan and South-East Asia, Forbes describes the plight
of the 13,000 Allied prisoners of war and more than
90,000 conscripted Asian labourers that were killed
while building the railway between 1942 and 1945.
The
title Hellfire, is instantly recognisable to many as
the place name synonymous with POW pain and suffering
at the hands of the Japanese, and as a place that will
stand for all time as an epitaph to the thousands of
unmarked graves that line an unused railway line that
has been mostly reclaimed by the jungle.
Sure, theres heaps of books on this, so does Hellfire
expose anything new?
I suppose not, but in this 60th anniversary year since
the end of World War II, its ever increasingly
important that we remember our history and have these
stories told and retold.
Forbes has gathered first person accounts which are
an unstoppable read.
From the escape attempts of Sparrow Force captives,
and surviving the sinking of HMAS Perth, to the vicious
maltreatment of Australian nurses and Dutch civilian
women, its hard to put it down.
But what I think makes this book stand out, is that
it adds something many other on this subject neglect.
The first few chapters give a brief outline of the racial
tension and Australias relationship with the Japanese
before, during and after World War I, and of the political
and economic factors that influenced Japan in its decision
to enter World War II.
Forbes has spent a great deal of time researching and
writing Hellfire, and I think among the host of books
released on the topic this year, this ones the
pick of the bunch.
CPL Damian Shovell
|