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Seller's Description:
Very good. binding good. cover rub marks, dents, and scratches. edge nicks and small bend marks. minor corner wear. no marks on text. 301 pages, 8 1/2" x 5 1/2", Cabanatuan: Murder Under the Sun is not a book for the squeamish or the faint of heart, nor is it for the politically correct historian or scholar, nor for the reader wit ha superficial desire to browse its pages fro whitewashed answers about the Japanese treatment of Allied prisoners during World War II. This book is intended to shock the reader by purporting obvious accuracies about what really happened to American Soldiers held active by the brutal and barbaric monsters of the Rising Sun. Cabanatuan: Murder Under the Sun is a novel which tells the combined horror stories of dozens of men who managed to survive the suffering, shame degradation of being a prisoner of the Japanese. It is a tale of how life truly was in a hot, disease-infected death camp. It id facile for the reader to truly understand how Cabanatuan Camp One could be considered nothing more than a huge cesspool lined with smelly sewer ditched filled with human excrement. In those filthy trenches, many destitute souls drowned from weakness, suicide, lack of friendly interest or inhumane torture. Camp One was patrolled daily by cowardly prisoner predators, guarded by the dregs and borderline rejects of the Nipponese military, and ruled by Bushido Code fanatics. The prisoners had little or no food, water, clothing, shelter or medicine. Yet a significant number survived. But only their dreams and a hope of freedom adequately sustained them until liberation finally arrived. God bless those honorable men who endured the wrath of Cabanatuan, so those of us who didn't suffer as they did, have been able to grow up and live safely and securely in a democratic land without fearing tyranny, injustice or enemy invasion.