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The Last Train from Hiroshima: The Survivors Look Back (John MacRae Books)

von Charles Pellegrino

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1406195,266 (4.07)10
Drawing on the voices of atomic-bomb survivors and the new science of forensic archaeology, Charles Pellegrino describes the events and aftermath of two days in August when nuclear devices detonated over Japan changed life on Earth forever.
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The Last Train from Hiroshima: The Survivors Look Back by Charles Pellegrino, Arthur Morey (Narrator) is a book that needs to be read by everyone. I have read several books about Hiroshima but I think this one is one of the best. It flows so well and covers so much- the science of the bomb (without going deep, just the basics), follows survivors, and pilots. It reads like a novel and I feel like I was living through it with them. This is a book that people need to read esp. now with this Government we have now. Our Groper-in-Chief has a thing for nukes. Scary! Esp. after reading this to remind me of how bad it was and our new ones are so much worse! The narration is perfect, couldn't get a better voice for this book. I got this book from the library. ( )
  MontzaleeW | Apr 5, 2017 |
Alegato contra la barbarie...¿Cómo reseñar una obra que te remece, que no te hace feliz pero que es necesaria escribirla y leerla? En la edición en español (Norma, 2011) Pellegrino nos ofrece una crónica pormenorizada de los sobrevivientes a las dos bombas atómicas y en especial a aquellos que tuvieron la experiencia de sobrevivir tanto a la de Hiroshima como a la de Nagasaki a la vez. Los que luego son conocidos en japonés como "Hibakusha". Estos son los "intocables", los marginados. Los que la propia sociedad japonesa rechaza para empleos o para formar un hogar por sus reales o supuestos "defectos geneticos"... Obra desgarradora que me refuerza la idea de "nunca más" para las guerras y la violencia política. Vale. ( )
  acajas | Aug 11, 2011 |
It isn’t very often that a book leaves me feeling physically winded, but this was one of them. The basic premise is painfully simple; to recount the many different experiences of the nuclear bombardment of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. Others have tried; notably, John Hersey’s excellent Hiroshima; but Pellegrino has produced something truly in a class of its own. The individuals come from all walks of life, and share mixed fortunes. Some died instantly, others escaped with barely a scratch and lived long and healthy lives after the war ended. Some were saved by mere circumstance, whilst others fled Hiroshima for the perceived safety of Nagasaki, and found themselves double survivors.

This book is excellently written, and presents a sound mixture of historical fact and human perception to tell a difficult story. If the book had a weak section, it was the end, where history started to drift into more abstract moralising about peace and nuclear disarmament. Having said that, even this section was highly relevant and it was an apt ending to a difficult but highly rewarding read. ( )
  pokarekareana | May 31, 2011 |
Jigoku. The Japanese word for hell. Yet probably no concept of hell is sufficient to convey the paroxysm of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945. Perhaps equally difficult to imagine is being within a few blocks or or a couple miles of Ground Zero and surviving to escape the city -- to go to Nagasaki, which would be struck by an even larger weapon three days later, and once again survive.

Those double survivors are a significant motif of Charles Pellegrino's The Last Train from Hiroshima: The Survivors Look Back. By chance released just two weeks after the death of one of its main subjects, Tsutomu Yamaguchi, the book tells the stories of many who experienced this hell on earth firsthand. They provide up close accounts of the bombings and their aftermath and illustrate how survival often hinged on the fortuity of just where they were at the time of the blast.

Some of the most gripping moments in the book seek to help us envision the microseconds following the Hiroshima pika-don ('flash bang'). Pellegrino takes the reader to a home and Buddhist temple where a 35-year-old widow and approximately half a dozen monks were basically at Ground Zero, as well as those within a few hundred or thousand feet of the blast's hypocenter. The book explains the physics and physiological effects in terms of millionths and thousandths of a second as the blast erupts and spreads, including the random chances that allowed some to survive while all around them were killed. In retrospect, the individuals at Ground Zero might be considered somewhat more fortunate than other victims. Pellegrino notes theirs were among the fastest deaths in history, their bodies ceasing to exist before their nerves could sense and transmit any pain.

Even as The Last Train from Hiroshima provides this atomic and cellular level delineation, it quickly takes a broader view. In fact, the book might try to encompass too many viewpoints. Unlike John Hersey's highly-praised 1946 article/book Hiroshima, which looked at six survivors of the Hiroshima bombing, the number of people from both Hiroshima and Nagasaki whose stories Pellegrino tells can be a bit confusing. The focus on double survivors, which he estimates at around two dozen, helps. Still, it is at times difficult to keep all the of eyewitnesses straight, in part because some of their stories are kindred and in part because, as Pellegrino notes, many of the names are very similar.

Although Pellegrino introduces us to a number of double survivors, Yamaguchi is the only one officially recognized by the Japanese government as a double hibakusha, the term given survivors of the bombings. He was less than two miles from the Hiroshima explosion and, despite suffering serious burns on the left side of his body, worked to return by train to his home and family in Nagasaki. The Last Train from Hiroshima accompanies him on that journey and how, when he returned to work the day after his return, was again less than two miles from the world's second Ground Zero. He was fortunate in more ways than one. The Mitsubishi plant at which he worked would have been Ground Zero had not cloud cover resulted in the larger Nagasaki bomb being dropped in a suburb.

The Last Train from Hiroshima looks at not only the immediate impact of the bombs but how they affected people, property and governments. The at times graphic descriptions can both appall and fascinate, such as how the eyeballs of some survivors were reshaped by the blast and eliminated their need for eyeglasses or the radiation caused one survivor's cancer to go into remission. Although the book seems to serve as a voice of protest against such weapons, the content alone speaks far more eloquently toward that end. That is not the main focus, however, and Pellegrino also takes the reader inside the aircraft that flew the bombing missions and the decision-making of the Japanese government.

Written in a straightforward and readable style, the book takes a less journalistic tone than Hersey's work. Which approach more effectively conveys the horror likely depends on the individual reader. Despite The Last Train from Hiroshima being much more of what might be termed popular history as opposed to Hersey's reportage style, it will be interesting to compare the impact of both on their respective generations of readers. Hersey's story first took up an entire issue of the New Yorker before being released as a book and, more recently, becoming the subject of a radio play. Thanks in part to their prior work together, movie director James Cameron has optioned the book for a possible film.

(Originally posted at A Progressive on the Prairie)
2 abstimmen PrairieProgressive | Jun 20, 2010 |
Fascinating read, but way too many characters. So many characters prevented me from connecting with the narrative. Attention James Cameron: This should be your next movie. Use your special effects know-how to illustrate the ant-walkers, the alligator people, the shock cocoons, the blue fireflies, the hypocenter, the airburst, the fire walls, the carbonized bodies, and especially the fire worms. People want to see the Hiroshima/Nagasaki stories visualized just as they needed images for the Titanic story. The world needs to know what really happened in H/N. After reading Pelegrino's book, I realize everything told before this has been a cover up.
  BrokenSpines | Feb 16, 2010 |
Facing a national outcry and the Corliss family’s evidence, the author, Charles Pellegrino, now concedes that he was probably duped. In an interview on Friday, he said he would rewrite sections of the book for paperback and foreign editions.

(This review obviously applies only to the U.S. hardback edition.)
 
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Drawing on the voices of atomic-bomb survivors and the new science of forensic archaeology, Charles Pellegrino describes the events and aftermath of two days in August when nuclear devices detonated over Japan changed life on Earth forever.

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