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The Pacific

The Pacific

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Author: Hugh Ambrose
Publisher: NAL Hardcover

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Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 62 reviews

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1St Edition
Pages: 512
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.8

ISBN: 045123023X
Dewey Decimal Number: 940.54
EAN: 9780451230232

Publication Date: March 2, 2010
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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  • ISBN13: 9780451230232
  • Condition: New
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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
The Pacific: An Opinionated History

The Pacific presents the Pacific War, from America?s first battle with the Japanese to the final shot. It blends eyewitness accounts into a larger perspective on the course of the war. However, this larger perspective is not solely provided by the historian, but also by the veterans. Put another way, instead of layering some oral histories onto a historical framework, I follow the lives of five veterans who, between them, experienced most of the key moments of the war. By walking with these men through their respective wars, the reader comes to see The Pacificas a whole.

The result of this approach is, I think, unusually powerful. The war comes at the reader with speed and power and meaning. The veterans, moreover, were not historians calmly researching and reporting all the facts. Their very definite opinions about people and events, as expressed in the book, must be understood in that light. Although historians may contest some of their judgments, I think they are valuable. It?s not just that veterans have a right to their own opinions?they certainly earned it?it?s that their passion is infectious. Reading this book, you will always care about what happens and why.

A careful reader will of course discern a great many of my conclusions about the war. I choose these particular men out of hundreds of possibilities for a reason. You will notice, for instance, that the US Army receives scant notice. I recognize that there were more army divisions serving in the Pacific than Marine Corps divisions. I admit that in fighting their way through the South Pacific, the soldiers won battles every bit as harrowing as those fought by the Leathernecks. As a historian, though, I believe that the drive through the South Pacific was secondary. Had the US only been able to sustain one drive, it would have been the one through the Central Pacific. In order to keep my book to manageable length, I focused on the US Navy and its Marine Corps.

Although the book focuses on Marines, specifically the story of the First Marine Division, it also includes the life of one aircraft carrier pilot. The Pacific War was a carrier war as no war has ever been. Few men saw as much of the carrier war as Vernon ?Mike? Micheel. To see Mike fly a dive bomber at the Battle of Midway and later at the Philippine Sea is to simultaneously appreciate these critical turning points; to understand them within the context of the war; and to witness the profound change in circumstances which occurred between them.

Mike Micheel served with two of the carrier war?s most important figures: Captain Miles Browning and Admiral J.J. ?Jocko? Clark. Through Mike, we do not come to understand them in their totality, as their biographies provide. We see them in action and as viewed by someone who served under them. Mike did not care for Browning, who is revered by some historians, because Browning ?short decked? his squadrons?as captain of the carrier USS Yorktown, he failed to ensure his pilots had enough open deck and enough headwind with which to take off. Conversely, Admiral Clark, who once accused Mike of skipping work to go drinking in the bars, comes off better than Browning. Clark?s personality could be as abrasive as Browning?s, but his motivations were sound. Mike understood that Clark wanted his ship to be the best. Every sailor on board Yorktown believed that their Admiral worked hard to achieve that goal.

Watching Mike?s experiences with these men, we understand why he judged them so. Part of his information about them came from hearsay or, as its known in the navy, scuttlebutt. Scuttlebutt is notoriously inaccurate. Mike knew that and tried not to be influenced by it, but he still was. The importance of gossip in the life of a man in combat is often stated by historians, but The Pacific endeavors to allow the reader to experience a man?s struggle to understand, to survive.

Each of the millions of men under arms in WWII experienced his own unique war. Each man within a company or a squadron comprehended his reality differently than his comrades. Can five men, with their own set of idiosyncratic experiences, represent this vast and complex war sufficiently to warrant the book?s all-encompassing title? I think so. By choosing these particular five men, I have written a history that simultaneously describes the individual experience and illuminates the general truths of that vast ocean of enmity we call The Pacific.

--Hugh Ambrose


Product Description
In this companion to the HBO(r) miniseries-executive produced by Tom Hanks, Steven Spielberg, and Gary Goetzman-Hugh Ambrose reveals the intertwined odysseys of four U.S. Marines and a U.S. Navy carrier pilot during World War II.

Between America's retreat from China in late November 1941 and the moment General MacArthur's airplane touched down on the Japanese mainland in August of 1945, five men connected by happenstance fought the key battles of the war against Japan. From the debacle in Bataan, to the miracle at Midway and the relentless vortex of Guadalcanal, their solemn oaths to their country later led one to the Great Marianas Turkey Shoot and the others to the coral strongholds of Peleliu, the black terraces of Iwo Jima and the killing fields of Okinawa, until at last the survivors enjoyed a triumphant, yet uneasy, return home.

In The Pacific, Hugh Ambrose focuses on the real-life stories of the five men who put their lives on the line for our country. To deepen the story revealed in the miniseries and go beyond it, the book dares to chart a great ocean of enmity known as The Pacific and the brave men who fought. Some considered war a profession, others enlisted as citizen soldiers. Each man served in a different part of the war, but their respective duties required every ounce of their courage and their strength to defeat an enemy who preferred suicide to surrender. The medals for valor which were pinned on three of them came at a shocking price-a price paid in full by all.




Customer Reviews:   Read 57 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars disappointing   July 20, 2010
David Walmsley (New York, NY USA)
OK book but very disappointing vs the high quality of the series. Great books on war usually either show: 1. the life of the warrior on the ground, or 2. The battles at some kind of tactical level, or 3. the higher level political, economic and scoial drivers of decisions and strategy.

This books managed to avoid all three aspects of the pacific campaign. It seemed to focus most on the events of the indivdual warrior, but whitewashed the gritty reality of the war. This is especially surprising given how relaism of HBO's series, THE PACIFIC.

Read Sledge's "with the Old Breed" or even better, Leckie's "Helmet for My Pillow" to get a REAL sense of what warriors faced on the ground.



4 out of 5 stars Good transaction   July 15, 2010
Mandi (TAHOE CITY, CA, US)
I bought this product as a gift. I didn't see it, so I can't comment on the quality, but I can say that it did arrive and close to on time.


3 out of 5 stars Workman-like   July 7, 2010
Thomas A. Wiebe (Tigard, OR USA)
I picked this book up on whim, to fill the hours of a long plane ride, mostly because of my admiration of the HBO series Band of Brothers; I had read that the new HBO Spielberg-Hanks production The Pacific was also excellent, but I do not have access to HBO and was waiting for the series to be published in blue-ray. So I thought, the book Band of Brothers by Stephen Ambrose, upon which the HBO series was based, was very good, so why not just read the Pacific in anticipation of that TV series?

Why not indeed. The book was average; it was reasonably detailed, and written after the style of Stephen Ambrose (Hugh's father), but lacked of the immediacy and dramatic punch that the situations often called for. If you have never read any accounts of the U.S. conflict in the Pacific, then don't start here. A better account might be Guadalcanal Diaryor perhaps Strong Men Armed: The United States Marines Against Japan.

All in all, it generally doesn't pay to read a book based on a movie, as this one was; it usually works the other way around (as with The Band of Brothers.) Now the blue-ray version of the The Pacific HBO Miniseries] is out, so I have that to look forward to!



5 out of 5 stars Learned A Lot   July 4, 2010
Momma P (Sandia, TX United States)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I don't recall learning much about the Pacific War in WW II when I was in school. I'd heard of Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa, but didn't know a lot of detail. I don't recall every hearing anything about Cape Gloucester or Peleliu, etc.

I have found this book to be very interesting and enlightening. I like the format of following particular men simultaneously instead of telling the whole story of one and then start over from 1941 with each subsequent man. I think this book gives me a really good over view of the Pacific War, and I can go back, now, to specific battles or people, like Eugene Sledge or R.V. Burgin, for even more detail.



5 out of 5 stars Recollections of A Marine   June 28, 2010
John Thomas (San Francisco, CA)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

As the son of a Marine who served on Guadalcanal in 1942, I had an unusual childhood. The memories all came flooding back to me as the HBO program, The Pacific, came to its conclusion this week. Every scene in the ten hour series I had already heard about around campfires, at veteran's reunions, or in officers clubs around the world. At five, I learned how to open a coconut by tapping around the three eyes with a bayonet. At ten I could shinny up a palm tree with a belt. I learned that you can shoot down a zero by leading by four hands and aiming high. A tank can be disabled by ramming a log in its tracks. There was the survival training; practicing how to find water in the desert, setting a snare trap for food, and starting a fire with flint and steel. All the sniper training was fun, but was fortunately never put to use. But, I can still thrill the kids by hitting a quarter taped to a tree 50 feet away with a Winchester 30-30. We outfitted ourselves with surplus WWII equipment from the "Supply Sergeant" for camping trips, and ate left over C-rations. Perhaps it was his explanation of how to make hooch out of canned peaches that led to a degree in biochemistry for me. In the end, I had my own Marine career as a pilot in Desert Storm. There you learn the true meaning of "gung ho." At 58, I stay in boot camp shape, which means hiking 20 miles a day for three days over rough terrain with a 60 pound pack. I know, because I did it last summer. Watching the series, I was reminded how feeble and meaningless my profession is, toiling all year just to create a spreadsheet with 12 numbers, and how the men of seven decades ago were made of sterner stuff. Buying a dip on a bad day just doesn't equate to "take out that machine gun."