
Island by Island: The Pacific War in Brutal Detail
Everything World War 2 - WWII, Book 5
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著者:
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Cyril Marlen
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World War II was a truly global conflict, but no theatre of the war tested the limits of human endurance, strategy, and brutality like the Pacific. In Island by Island: The Pacific War in Brutal Detail, author Cyril Marlen delivers a visceral, unflinching account of the long, bitter struggle between Allied forces and the Empire of Japan. This is not a broad-strokes overview—it’s a deep dive into the raw, punishing reality of the Pacific War, told through vivid detail, gripping analysis, and a relentless focus on the battles that defined the ocean-spanning campaign.
From the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor to the mushroom clouds over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Pacific War unfolded as a series of punishing engagements scattered across an unfathomably vast ocean. Each island was a fortress. Every victory was bought with blood. The stakes were total, the enemy determined, and the conditions unlike any other battlefield in history. This book takes you into the heart of that struggle, exploring the full scope of the war’s Pacific front:
- The Vastness of the Pacific: Understand the sheer logistical nightmare of waging war over thousands of miles of open ocean and scattered archipelagos.
- Japan’s Early Domination: How the Empire of Japan seized territory with speed and precision, building an early advantage and presenting a dire threat to Australia and beyond.
- “Island Hopping” Strategy: Discover how the Allies avoided costly frontal assaults by strategically leaping from island to island, cutting off Japanese supply lines and tightening the noose.
- Amphibious Assaults: Experience the hell of landing on beaches under fire—Tarawa, Saipan, Iwo Jima—where victory often meant fighting yard by bloody yard.
- Jungle Warfare: Beyond bullets, soldiers faced leeches, malaria, dysentery, and the ever-present threat of an ambush in terrain that swallowed armies.