Deeply moving, intensely graphic account of World War II prisoners of
warIncludes a gut-wrenching description of the Bataan Death MarchFew
American prisoners of war during World War II suffered more than the
group that was captured on the Bataan Peninsula in the Philippines. The
men were forced to endure the infamous Death March, a series of
overcrowded prison camps, and the "hell ships" transporting them to
Japan and Korea. Among them was Col. Irvin Alexander, who recounts his
harrowing experience as a captive of the Japanese. As a midlevel
commander, he knew the politics behind the surrender in April 1942, but
he also suffered with the rest of the men through a horrific
confinement. This is the story of one man's struggle to survive a
brutal, often unfathomable captivity.