A "very dramatic [and] compelling" World War II story of murder,
mutiny, and a military cover-up, from the author of The Phoenix
Program (The New York Times).
Captured by the Japanese while on patrol in the fetid jungles of New
Guinea, Douglas Valentine's father, who'd enlisted in the US Army at age
sixteen, was sent to a prison camp in the Philippines, where he was
interned with Australian and British soldiers.
The events that followed make up this "well-told, chilling" story of
betrayal and brutality--a powerful tale of a son uncovering the
traumatic events that shaped the rest of his father's life (Los Angeles
Times Book Review).
"Not just a searing picture of life in a terrible POW camp, it is also a
significant historical document about a place that the U.S. military
says never existed." --Publishers Weekly