This account of the Bataan Death March and the Cabanatuan prison camp raid follows the stories of multiple witnesses and survivors.
Based largely on first-person reports, the latest from noted author Hopkinson tells the stories of Americans and Filipinos, military and civilian, and their experiences in the Philippines from the bombing of Pearl Harbor until the liberation of the Cabanatuan camp. It largely focuses on the experiences of POWs but includes many other details and perspectives that help readers to put events into context. The story is presented narratively, jumping among the eyewitnesses with their stories broken up by contextual information as well as prisoners’ art and poetry, all of which add a feeling of vivid immediacy. Reading it feels almost like watching a World War II newsreel: informative yet thrilling. Hopkinson uses supplemental maps and images effectively; one never needs to turn back to a previous page to remember what is happening. She does not shy away from relating the horrors of these events in an age-appropriate way. She is also careful to state that this book tells just one part of the whole story and is not the definitive word on World War II in the Philippines. An introductory author’s note provides valuable context on race and gender and their impact on military service at the time and acknowledges the unjust persecution of Japanese Americans on the homefront.
A fascinating, nuanced, and emotional historical narrative.
(timeline, resources, bibliography, source notes, image credits, index) (Nonfiction. 10-14)