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| List Price: | $12.95 |
| Amazon.com new price: | $7.81 |
| Amazon.com used price starts at: | $7.85 |
| Amazon.com Sales rank: | 742763 |
Back to reviews and details of Dragon of the Mangroves: Inspired by True Events of World War II
Rating: 5 Summary: Learn about the stench of death in this true story
Comment Like all books that truly touch you, this book is based on a true story. Yasuyuki shares his experiences as a Japanese soldier fighting in the Burma campaign during World War II. Most people do not know about this deadly crocodile attack that the author describes with such vividness. This horrible story is shared in great detail in this book, a book you will not soon forget.
Rating: 5 Summary: Destined to become a classic
Comment Reviewed by Richard R. Blake for Reader Views (4/07)
"Dragon of the Mangroves" is inspired by events of World War II and is based on a true story. This compelling novel is a fictional account of a deadly crocodile attack against a garrison of the Twenty-eighth Japanese Army assigned to Ramree Island, off the coast of Burma. While on the Island Minoru, Kasuga is confronted with a terrible smell coming from a saltwater creek. A local villager tells him it is the stench of death from the breath of man-eating crocodiles that inhabit Myinkhon Creek.
After fierce fighting, the battalion is driven to the island's east coast to evacuate by crossing the creek. As they are ready to embark, Kasuga smells the same putrid odor. He warns his commanding officer of the danger. His sergeant disregards him, and orders the soldiers to cross the creek.
Second Lieutenant Yoshihisa Sumi is ordered to save the survivors of the garrison on Ramree Island. Upon his arrival at Myinkhon Creek Sumi is faced with stark terror.
Kasai demonstrates an amazing insight into the driving force of military men. Some are motivated by fear or cowardice, others by pride, patriotism, heroics, or bravery. But all are moved by a strong desire to live, for self-preservation and for survival.
Although the book is written in the English language, Kasai's commanding word pictures and descriptions enabled me envision and appreciate the references to Japanese cultural and background adding an authentic picture of the Burmese locale.
"Dragon of the Mangroves" is destined to become a classic among the stories of the South Pacific of WWII and among the guerrilla warfare stories of every subsequent conflict.
Rating: 5 Summary: Horror story and war novel
Comment Books in English about the experience of Japanese soldiers in WW II are rare, although this may change with recent popularity of the movie 'Letters from Iwo Jima.' This novel, 'Dragon of the Mangroves,' is based on a "war story" about a Japanese unit that was annihilated by saltwater crocodiles while retreating through a mangrove swamp. The anecdote itself may be apocryphal but the concept is not totally implausible, as anyone who's seen troops of crocodiles pulling down migrating wildebeests on Discovery Channel can attest. The author, Yasuyuki Kasai, is the son of a WW II Japanese artilleryman and appears to have incorporated some of his father's personal observations and experiences into the story, which gives it a certain authenticity. The novel itself is not simply written from a Japanese point of view but by a Japanese, and so includes many unique cultural elements in the background and plot, especially the foreshadowing. The characters, primarily a heavy machine gun crew and a young officer who went for his commission to escape the drudgery and harsh discipline in the enlisted ranks, are sympathetic and well drawn. The language is not always smooth and the pacing is uneven here and there, but these are minor criticisms. As much a horror story - a la 'Jaws' - as it is a war novel, 'Dragon of the Mangroves' is well worth a read.