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Author Holmes, Linda Goetz.

Title Guests of the emperor : the secret history of Japan's Mukden POW camp / Linda Goetz Holmes.

Imprint Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, ©2010.

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Location Call No. Status
 Middletown, Russell Library - Adult Nonfiction  940.5472 HOL    Check Shelf
Description xiv, 147 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents The long heartbreak begins -- Voyage to a frozen hell and deadly camp -- Man in a cage : the Unit 731 doctors come to Mukden -- Unit 731 doctors call again and again -- The colonel's rules and his "hospital" -- The MKK factory : daily toil, fear, and sabotage -- Major Stanley Hankins : a major embarrassment -- Escape -- Red Cross double-crossed -- Another escape : an ongoing mystery -- B-29s bring death, hope, and rescue -- The long road back -- Justice in the aftermath? -- Back in time.
Summary "Linda Goetz Holmes has done it again. As with her seminal work, Unjust Enrichment, that exposed the depth of Japanese industrialists and manufacturing companies' involvement in the pursuit of war profits, she now reveals the truth behind the rumors and horrors of the Mukden prisoner of war camp. -- Back Cover.
Like an onion, Holmes peels away the layers of secret horrors, one layer at a time. At last, we see the proof of Japanese medical experiments by the notorious Unit 731 on American prisoners at Mukden, the largest fixed POW camp in the Empire. She carefully documents the use of germ warfare experiments upon the men and the endless brutality and torture of the prisoners by Japanese guards and Japanese nationals. The full story of the four men who sought to escape is told in detail and Holmes traces not just their escape but their capture and the abuse of the remaining POWS in revenge for the'loss of face' by the guards. -- Back Cover.
Holmes spares no one in telling the truth about the Mukden camp, including the utter incompetence of most American officers, especially the ranking officer, Major Stanley H. Han-kins. Few ever cared about the suffering of their subordinates and were willing to steal their food and medicine for their personal use. It is not a story of honor, but truth is rarely pretty. -- Back Cover.
A magnificent work of research and narrative that is destined to be the definitive work about the Mukden POW camp." Roger Mansell, director, Center For Research Allied POWS Under the Japanese -- Back Cover.
"It is high time that we are provided with a truthful and revealing account of that large Japanese camp for American prisoners of war who suffered not only the brutality and deprivations of most captured by the Japanese, but were also the first victims of the horrendous biological warfare experiments of the notorious Unit 731, and after liberation have been shamefully ignored and mistreated by their own government."Gerhard L. Weinberg, author of A World at Arms -- Back Cover.
"Linda Holmes' informative narrative is the most complete account of the Japanese treatment of U.S. POWs at the Mukden POW camp. She skillfully weaves her extensive interviews with former POWs into a compelling tale of life and death in Japanese captivity."Edward J. Drea, author of Japan's Imperial Army: Its Rise and fall, 1853-1945. -- Back Cover.
In World War II more than 36,000 American men, mostly military but some civilian, were thrown into Japanese POW camps and forced to labor for companies working for Japan's war effort. At Japan's largest fixed military prison camp, Mitsubishi's huge factory complex at Mukden, Manchuria, more than 2,000 American prisoners were subjected to cold, starvation, beatings, and even medical experiments while manufacturing parts for Zero fighter planes. Those lucky enough to survive the ordeal required the efforts of an OSS rescue team and a special recovery unit to make it home alive. -- Back Cover.
The dramatic story that unfolded at Mukden is told in rare detail by Holmes, who spent two decades tracking down the POWs. In addition to the well-researched story of the brutal captivity and forced labor at the hands of the Japanese that these POWs endured, she shows conclusively for the first time that some Americans at Mukden were singled out for experiments by Japan's infamous biological warfare team. -- Back Cover.
Subject Mukden (Prisoner of war camp)
Mitsubishi Zaibatsu -- History.
World War, 1939-1945 -- Prisoners and prisons, Japanese.
World War, 1939-1945 -- Conscript labor -- Japan.
Prisoners of war -- Japan.
Prisoners of war -- United States.
Shenyang (Liaoning Sheng, China) -- History, Military -- 20th century.
Mukden (Prisoner of war camp) (OCoLC)fst01996723
Mitsubishi Zaibatsu. (OCoLC)fst00630896
Prisoners of war. (OCoLC)fst01077227
China -- Shenyang (Liaoning Sheng) (OCoLC)fst01313067
Japan. (OCoLC)fst01204082
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
Japan.
United States of America.
Manchuria.
Prisoners of war.
Forced labour.
Concentration camps.
World War II.
History.
Experiments on human beings.
War crimes.
World War (1939-1945) (OCoLC)fst01180924
Chronological Term 1900-1999
Genre/Form History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
Military history. (OCoLC)fst01411630
ISBN 9781591143772 (alk. paper)
1591143772 (alk. paper)
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