My Hitch In Hell
This is an autobiographical story of a World War II Prisoner of War (POW), surviving the Bataan Death March, escaping into the jungles of the Philippines, being recaptured, working as a POW in a coal mine in Japan, and eventually witnessing the atomic bomb blast at Nagasaki from the prison camp in Japan.
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"My Hitch in Hell" by Dr. Lester I. Tenney pow070728@gtenney.com ISBN 0-02-881125-9 A survivor of the Bataan Death March as a POW during WW II. Click here to purchase this book (hardcover) in association with Amazon.com (it's now available in paperback). Note that the hardcover book may now only be available as a collector's item. |
An excerpt:
If you want to read a sample chapter, here is Chapter
4: The March which describes the infamous Bataan Death March. This
is a large amount of text to download, so please be patient.
About the book:
An uncompromising story combining the history of the
war in the Philippines, the drama of the fighting on Bataan, and the dreams,
goals and anguish of a survivor of the Infamous Bataan Death
March.
We survivors returned with our heads hung low. We arrived back in the United
States quietly, anonymously, without fanfare. There were no banners welcoming
us home, no parades to march in, no speeches, no acknowledgments of any kind.
The war had ended, people wanted to get on with their lives. Unfortunately many
of us came home to find that some family members had died, that some wives or
sweethearts had found others to take our places.
In spite of defending the dropping of the atomic bomb, Tenney's searing wartime
experiences of the past and his gracious respect for the Japanese in the present,
bring a unique perspective to the current debates over Japan's wartime culpability,
the morality of the atomic bombs, and
American-Japanese relations today.
This story touches on:
The fighting on Bataan
The Infamous Bataan Death March
The Box-Car death ride to Camp O'Donnell
The living hell at Camp O'Donnell
Forced work on Japanese work details while a POW in the Philippines
The inhumane ship ride to Japan
Life in Camp #17, in Fukuoka, Japan
Working under hazardous conditions in a coal mine
Being caught trading with the Japanese
Witnessing the Mushroom Cloud over Nagasaki
On August 15th, hearing, "Japan and America now friends"
The 29th replacement depot outside Manila
The ship ride home - - We are free at last!
This is a first-person account of horror, survival and dreams. A must for the
library of those interested in the history of W.W.II This is not intended as
a rancorous book, it is not a pleasant story, but neither were the times very
pleasant. It's a realistic story of man's fight for survival while keeping his
ideals and faith intact.
You can purchase this book in association with Amazon.com |
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Click here to purchase paperback |
This page last updated August 7, 2005