Gazelle Book Services Limited.

White Cross Mills, Hightown, LANCASTER LA1 4XS, United Kingdom.
Telephone: +44(0)1524 68765
Fax: +44(0)1524 63232
Email: sales@gazellebooks.co.uk
Web: www.gazellebooks.co.uk





Title:Carlos : A Tale of Survival
Author:J L Kunkle
ISBN:0979682215 : 9780979682216
Format:Paperback
Size:140x215mm
Pages:317
Weight: .512 Kg.
Published:AtlasBooks (I-Socket Presse) - June 2007
List Price: 14.99 Pounds Sterling
Availability:In Print
Subjects:True stories: Second World War


Carlos' story is that of one man's journey through the years of the twentieth century; arguably the most tumultuous times in world history. This book follows him through the lean times of the Great Depression, to enlistment in the National Guard toward the end of the 1930s, and then mobilisation and deployment to the Philippines immediately prior to World War 2. Shortly after he arrives in the Philippines and eight hours after the attack on Pearl Harbour, the Japanese Navy attacks Manila and Clark Field, and for the next four months, the Philippine and US Armies fight to hold the Bataan peninsula until reinforcements arrive. Unlike a Hollywood movie, the cavalry doesn't come to save the day, and approx. 70,000 men are surrendered to the Japanese on the 9 April 1942. What follows is the notorious Bataan Death March, where thousands died over a span of about fifteen days, then torturous work details and months of starvation in camps across the Philippines. He is eventually transported to mainland Japan via hellship, and spends the remainder of the war as a slave in the freezing environment of northwest Japan, working like a pack-mule, loading coal. In 1945 after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the emperor surrendered unconditionally and Carlos was liberated and returned to society. There he quickly learned that the war had not only changed the society he left behind in 1941, but the three years and ten months that he spent as a prisoner of the Japanese military had also changed him in ways that he and those around him were only beginning to see.