Remembering Pearl Harbor: Eyewitness Accounts by U.S. Military Men and Women
Books / Paperback
Books › History › Wars & Conflicts › World War II
ISBN: 0345373804 / Publisher: Ballantine Books, January 1992
Riveting eyewitness accounts of the "Day of Infamy" from soldiers, sailors, airmen, nurses, chaplains, and wives who were at Pearl Harbor describe their horrible experiences at the scene of the inferno of battleship row. Reissue.
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They survived the “date which will live in infamy.” Now they tell the unofficial story. Many books have been written about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, an unprecedented event that launched the United States into World War II. But here is a rare compilation of eyewitness accounts by those who actually survived the bombing on December 7, 1941. This book is their story. Not the official version from the top brass, but the riveting, clear-as-yesterday accounts of the ordinary soldiers, sailors, airmen, nurses, chaplains, and wives who were at Pearl Harbor, going about their normal lives that fateful Sunday morning. From the burning deck of the Tennessee in the inferno of Battleship Row, from the airfields, from the hospitals, and from the Navy Yard dry docks come the chilling and unforgettable stories of these brave men and women.
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