Background: I have made an earnest effort to learn what I can about nuclear weapons. That means how they work, what they do, how we came to build them and how and why they were used. I trace the interest to the fact that I have a personal connection to the Cuban Missile Crisis. I was living in Florida, attending St. Leo Prep School at the time. During the crisis, I personally saw the tanks running down the Tami_Ami trail from Tampa to Miami. We charted out the likely targets in Florida and the risk that we were running in Central Florida. The weapons have never frightened me.
I own 2 copies of this book. The first is so beat up it is embarrassing…LOL. The last copy was actually found by my wife and I bought it immediately. An update: on our trip to New Mexico in October 2009, I found another copy. It has no Dust Jacket but the book itself is in exceptional condition. Had to buy that one too…
The text of this book was originally published in the New Yorker on the first anniversary of the end of the war. Hersey spent 3 weeks or so in Japan gathering the material for the article. The article was later published as a book, all 30,000 words of it. The story told is really horrific and graphic. It is, so far as I know, the only published account of the aftermath that was composed soon after the event. I’ve got no problems with the use of the weapons at that time. I’ve spent some effort to understand the reasoning behind the decisions and have no quarrel with them. This has gotten me into a number of discussions with the revisionists who push the lie that the use of the weapon was either immoral or unnecessary. These folks simply do not have anything like a decent understanding of the time. But, this sorta balances the picture out a bit. Elsewhere in my archives are all the photographs I have encountered related to either Hiroshima or Nagasaki. I also have a small collection of photographs of test explosions and a book titles “100 Suns” with exceptional pictures. Bookwise, there are several books that talk to the events leading up to the bombings and the events that took place within the Japanese Military at the end of the war and their attitude toward the surrender.
Interesting that I am writing this on August 23, while the anniversary of the event is August 6.
I found the following summary of the book on the CliffNotes site:
On August 6, 1945, the first atomic bomb is dropped from an American plane on the 245,000 residents of Hiroshima, Japan. Most of the city is destroyed and thousands of its inhabitants die. Some of its citizens survive and suffer the debilitating effects of terrible burns and radiation illness. The lives of six of those survivors are recounted in the days following the bombing.
When the bomb detonates, Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura is watching her neighbor’s house and overseeing her sleeping children; all end up covered in debris when their house is destroyed. Miss Toshiko Sasaki, an office clerk, is leaning over to speak to a fellow worker when she is blasted out of her desk and trapped under heavy bookcases. She sustains a severely broken leg. A medical doctor, Masakazu Fujii, is reading on his porch when he is catapulted into a river and squeezed between two large timbers. Still another doctor, Terufumi Sasaki, falls to the floor in the corridor of the Red Cross Hospital and gazes in wonder at the scene outside the window. Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge awakens in the vegetable garden of the Catholic mission house, injured and dazed. The Reverend Kiyoshi Tanimoto throws himself between two large rocks and is hit with debris from a nearby house. Most of the six survivors are hurt, but they are all alive.
In the hours following the bombing, each survivor attempts to free himself or herself, find loved ones, and help others if possible. Dr. Sasaki grabs bandages and works 19 hours at a time, trying to bandage the 10,000 injured people making their way to his hospital. In the hours and days after the bombing, he becomes an automaton, going from one patient to another. Dr. Fujii, injured badly himself, attempts to help his nurses and find his way to his family’s home where he can get first aid supplies. Mrs. Nakamura works relentlessly to uncover her three children in the debris; they appear unhurt but dazed and shaken. She takes them to Asano Park where they can find some shelter under trees. Miss Sasaki spends days and hours in the debris, but she is finally rescued although semi-conscious and in pain and left in a lean-to. Father Kleinsorge helps those trapped under houses and makes his way to Asano Park along with Mr. Tanimoto. Both ministers help people in the park put out fires and get medical help.
During the evening of August 6, the survivors struggle to endure and help each other. The city is a ball of flame, and the park is filled with radiation rain and whirlwinds. The suffering of thousands of people and their wounds and burns are described repeatedly. Mr. Tanimoto must remind himself that these creatures are human beings. Relentlessly, he ferries boatloads of people upstream to get to higher ground. Several injured priests and the Nakamura family are evacuated to the Novitiate in the hills. The injured and dying are so numerous that the doctors no longer help the badly injured because they are not going to survive. Miss Sasaki is finally evacuated and begins many days and weeks of being moved from one hospital or aid station to another.
As time goes by, order is slowly restored, but the overwhelming scene of misery and human suffering is a sharp counterpoint to the official news released from various governments. On August 9, a second bomb is dropped, this time on the Japanese city of Nagasaki. On August 15, the Emperor of Japan gives a radio address telling his people that Japan has surrendered.
Next, the horrible revelations of radiation illness commence. Dr. Kleinsorge must go to a hospital in Tokyo. He will never again regain his energy or health. Miss Sasaki, also in a hospital, is so depressed over being crippled for the rest of her life that her doctor asks Father Kleinsorge to visit her. Dr. Sasaki spends months and years analyzing the effects of the radiation and how best to treat it; he marries and begins a medical practice. Dr. Fujii also opens a medical practice and begins socializing with the occupation officers. Mrs. Nakamura and her children lose their hair and suffer from various illnesses, but because they are so poor, they cannot afford to see a doctor. Mr. Tanimoto attempts to operate his church out of his badly destroyed home. The survivors struggle on with the effects of the radiation, and attempt to find ways to manage despite their injuries.