2026-01-25

Hiroshima (book John Hersey) - Wikipedia 1946

Hiroshima (book) - Wikipedia





Hiroshima (book)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hiroshima
First edition
AuthorJohn Hersey
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAlfred A. Knopf, Inc.
Publication date
1946
Pages160 pp
ISBN978-0679721031
OCLC680840
940.54/25 19
LC ClassD767.25.H6 H4 1989

Hiroshima is a 1946 book by American author John Hersey. It tells the stories of six survivors of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. It is regarded as one of the earliest examples of New Journalism, in which the story-telling techniques of fiction are adapted to non-fiction reporting.[1]

The work was originally published in The New Yorker, which had planned to run it over four issues but instead dedicated the entire edition of August 31, 1946, to a single article.[2] Less than two months later, the article was printed as a book by Alfred A. Knopf. Never out of print,[3] it has sold more than three million copies.[1][4] "Its story became a part of our ceaseless thinking about world wars and nuclear holocaust," New Yorker essayist Roger Angell wrote in 1995.[1]

Background

Before writing Hiroshima, Hersey had been a war correspondent in the field, writing for Life magazine and The Nan working in the Pacific Theater and followed Lt. John F. Kennedy through the Solomon Islands.[5] One of the first Western journalists to view the ruins of Hiroshima after the bombing, Hersey was commissioned by William Shawn of The New Yorker to write articles about the impact of a nuclear explosion by using witness accounts, a subject virtually untouched by journalists.[5] Hersey interviewed many witnesses; he focused his article on six in particular.

Publication in The New Yorker

Hersey's article was published in the August 31, 1946, issue and began where the magazine's regular "Talk of the Town" column usually began. At the bottom of the page, the editors appended a short note: "TO OUR READERS. The New Yorker this week devotes its entire editorial space to an article on the almost complete obliteration of a city by one atomic bomb, and what happened to the people of that city. It does so in the conviction that few of us have yet comprehended the all but incredible destructive power of this weapon, and that everyone might well take time to consider the terrible implications of its use. The Editors." One of the few people other than the principal editors of The New Yorker tipped to the forthcoming publication was the magazine's principal writer E. B. White, to whom Harold Ross confided his plans. "Hersey has written thirty thousand words on the bombing of Hiroshima (which I can now pronounce in a new and fancy way)", Ross wrote to White in Maine, "one hell of a story, and we are wondering what to do about it ... [William Shawn, managing editor of The New Yorker] wants to wake people up, and says we are the people with a chance to do it, and probably the only people that will do it, if it is done."[6]

Literary reception

Hiroshima in ruins, October 1945, two months after the atomic bomb exploded.

Containing a detailed description of the bomb's effects, the article was a publishing sensation. In plain prose, Hersey described the horrifying aftermath of the atomic device: people with melted eyeballs, or people vaporized, leaving only their shadows etched onto walls.[7] The New Yorker article Hiroshima was an immediate best seller and was sold out at newsstands within hours.[8] Many requests for reprints were received by the magazine's offices. The ABC Radio Network preempted regular programming to broadcast readings of the complete text by well-known actors in four half-hour programs.[9] Many radio stations abroad did likewise, including the BBC in Britain, where newsprint rationing that continued after the war's end prevented its publication; Hersey would not permit editing of the piece to cut its length.[3][10] The Book of the Month Club rushed a copy of the article into book format, which it sent to members as a free selection, saying "We find it hard to conceive of anything being written that could be of more important [sic] at this moment to the human race."[3][6]

Published a little more than a year after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, it showed the American public a different interpretation of the Japanese from what had been previously described in the media.[11] After reading Hiroshima, a Manhattan Project scientist wrote that he wept as he remembered how he had celebrated the dropping of the atomic bomb.[11] Scientists along with the American public felt shame and guilt at the suffering of the people of Hiroshima.[11]

The 31,000 word article was published later the same year by Alfred A. Knopf as a book.[12] Hersey's work is often cited as one of the earliest examples of New Journalism in its melding of elements of non-fiction reportage with the pace and devices of the novel. Hersey's plain prose was praised by critics as a model of understated narrative. Hersey rarely gave interviews and abhorred going on anything resembling book tours, as his longtime editor Judith Jones recalled. "If ever there was a subject calculated to make a writer overwrought and a piece overwritten, it was the bombing of Hiroshima", wrote Hendrik Hertzberg; "yet Hersey's reporting was so meticulous, his sentences and paragraphs were so clear, calm and restrained, that the horror of the story he had to tell came through all the more chillingly."[13]

The author said he adopted the plain style to suit the story he strove to tell. "The flat style was deliberate", Hersey said 40 years later, "and I still think I was right to adopt it. A high literary manner, or a show of passion, would have brought me into the story as a mediator. I wanted to avoid such mediation, so the reader's experience would be as direct as possible."[6]

The founder of The New Yorker Harold Ross told his friend, author Irwin Shaw: "I don't think I've ever got as much satisfaction out of anything else in my life." But The New Yorker's publication of Hersey's article caused trouble with respect to Hersey's relationship with Henry Luce, the co-founder of Time-Life and Hersey's first mentor, who felt Hersey should have reported the event for one of Luce's magazines instead. Despite Luce's misgivings about Hersey's choice of The New Yorker to print the Hiroshima story, the magazine's format and style allowed the author much more freedom in reporting and writing. The Luce publications – TimeLife and Fortune – had nothing similar. Moreover, The New Yorker went to unprecedented lengths to keep the Hersey story secret. The weekly magazine's top editors observed complete secrecy about the printing of the article. While editors Harold Ross and William Shawn spent long hours editing and deliberating every sentence, the magazine's staff was not told anything about the forthcoming issue. Staffers were baffled when the normal weekly proofs were not returned, and their inquiries were not answered. Even the advertisement department was deliberately not informed.[6]

Time magazine said about Hiroshima:

Every American who has permitted himself to make jokes about atom bombs, or who has come to regard them as just one sensational phenomenon that can now be accepted as part of civilization, like the airplane and the gasoline engine, or who has allowed himself to speculate as to what we might do with them if we were forced into another war, ought to read Mr. Hersey. When this magazine article appears in book form the critics will say that it is in its fashion a classic. But it is rather more than that.[11]

The magazine later termed Hersey's account of the bombing "the most celebrated piece of journalism to come out of World War II."[14]

It was also met with approval by The New Republic which said "Hersey's piece is certainly one of the great classics of the war".[15] While the majority of the excerpts praised the article, Mary McCarthy said that "to have done the atomic bomb justice, Mr. Hersey would have had to interview the dead".[16] It was quickly a book in the Book-of-the-Month Club; it was distributed for free because of the questions it raised about the humanity of the human race.[17] Hiroshima was also read word for word on the radio by the American Broadcasting Company, amplifying its effects.[2][18]

Publication in Japan

Although the US military government (headed by Douglas MacArthur)[19] dissuaded publishers from bringing out the book in Japan, small numbers of copies were distributed; in January 1947 Hersey gave a reading in English in Tokyo.[2] A Japanese translation of Hiroshima was first published in 1949 in Japan; it has not been out of print since.[8][20][21] According to Gar Alperovitz in The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb, "Occupation authorities suppressed various accounts of the atomic bombings. A noteworthy instance involved the denial in later 1946 of a request by the Nippon Times to publish John Hersey's Hiroshima (in English)."[22] MacArthur said in 1948 that despite numerous charges of censorship made against the censor's office by the US news media, Hiroshima was not banned in Japan.[23]

Outline

The article begins on the morning of August 6, 1945, the day the atomic bomb was dropped, killing an estimated 135,000 people.[24] The book begins with the following sentence:

At exactly fifteen minutes past eight in the morning on August 6, 1945, Japanese time, at the moment when the atomic bomb flashed above Hiroshima, Miss Toshiko Sasaki, a clerk in the personnel department of the East Asia Tin Works, had just sat down at her place in the plant office and was turning her head to speak to the girl at the next desk.

— Hiroshima, John Hersey, 1946[25]

Hersey introduces the six characters: two doctors, a Protestant minister, a widowed seamstress, a young female factory worker and a German Catholic priest.[26] It describes their mornings before the bomb was dropped. Through the book, the lives of these six people overlap as they share similar experiences. Each chapter covers a time period from the morning of the bombing to one year later for each witness. An additional chapter covering the aftermath 40 years after the bombing was added in later editions.

The six characters are:

Reverend Mr. Kiyoshi Tanimoto

Tanimoto is 3,500 yards (3,200 m) from the explosion. A pastor at Hiroshima Methodist Church, a small man in stature, "quick to talk, laugh and cry", weak yet fiery, cautious and thoughtful, he was educated in theology in the U.S. at Emory University, in Atlanta, Georgia, speaks excellent English, obsessed with being spied on, Chairman of Neighborhood Association.[4]

Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura

Nakamura is 1,350 yards (1,230 m) from explosion center. She is a widow of a tailor who is raising her three children (10-year-old boy Toshio, eight-year-old girl Yaeko, and five-year-old girl Myeko). Her husband had been killed in Singapore in 1942.

Dr. Masakazu Fujii

Fujii is 1,550 yards (1,420 m) from explosion center. He is described as hedonistic, owner of a private 30-room hospital that contains modern equipment, has family living in Osaka and Kyushu, and is convivial and calm.

Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge [de] (Makoto Takakura)

Kleinsorge is 1,400 yards (1,300 m) from explosion center. Kleinsorge at the time is a 38-year-old German Jesuit priest. Weakened by his wartime diet, he feels unaccepted by the Japanese people and has a "thin face, with a prominent Adam's apple, a hollow chest, dangling hands, big feet.".[4] His father superior within the mission station is Hugo Lassalle.[27]

Dr. Terufumi Sasaki

Dr. Terufumi Sasaki is 1,650 yards (1,510 m) from the center of the explosion. He works as a 25-year-old surgeon at the Red Cross Hospital. He lives with his mother in Mukaihara, an idealist. Upset with poor health services, he practices medicine without a permit in communities lacking in quality health care. He is not related to Miss Toshiko Sasaki.

Miss Toshiko Sasaki (Sister Dominique Sasaki)

Sasaki is 1,600 yards (1,500 m) from the center of the explosion. She is 20 years old and engaged to a soldier, as well as working as a "clerk in the personnel department of the East Asia Tin Works"[4]

"A Noiseless Flash"

This chapter introduces the characters and details the witnesses' accounts of the morning before and their perception of the explosion of the atomic bomb. The explosion occurred at exactly 8:15 am, local time. Miss Toshiko is at her desk and talking to a fellow employee at the Tin factory when the room filled with "a blinding light"[4] and the flash was so powerful that it pushed over a bookshelf crushing Miss Toshiko's leg while she went unconscious. She was covered with a bookshelf while the building collapsed around her. While sitting on his porch, Dr. Masakuza Fujii witnessed a "brilliant yellow" flash and toppled into the river.[4] He injured his shoulder severely. After returning to her home from a safe area, Mrs. Nakamura saw a flash "whiter than any white she had" seen before.[4] She was thrown into the next room while her children were buried in debris. While reading his morning paper, Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge witnesses a "terrible flash ... [like] a large meteor colliding with the earth".[4] He found himself in the vegetable garden of the missionary with only small cuts. Standing alone in a corridor, Dr. Terufumi Sasaki saw a "gigantic photographic flash".[4] The explosion ripped the hospital apart but Dr. Sasaki remained untouched except his glasses and shoes had been blown off his body. Dr. Sasaki was now the only doctor to be unhurt in the hospital and the hospital was quickly filled with patients. Reverend Kiyoshi Tanimoto saw a "tremendous flash of light cut across the sky".[4] Tanimoto threw himself against a wall of his home and felt pressure, splinters, and debris falls on him.

"The Fire"

Chapter 2 documents the time immediately after the explosion where the fires are spreading and the witnesses are trying to save others and find safety for themselves. Immediately after the explosion, Reverend Tanimoto ran in search of his family and parishioners. He puts aside the search for his family when he comes across people in need of help and then resumes the search for his family. Mrs. Nakamura travels with her children and neighbor to Asano Park at the Jesuit mission house. Mrs. Nakamura and her children are continuously vomiting. Father Kleinsorge is found wandering the mission grounds with numerous pieces of glass in his back. Father Kleinsorge ran into his room and grabbed a first aid kit and his suitcase containing money and paperwork of the mission. Father Kleinsorge and others go out and bring food back for everyone at Asano Park.

Dr. Fujii's hospital was in the nearby river while he was trapped between its beams, unable to move. Dr. Fujii looks at the city and calls it "an endless parade of misery".[4] Dr. Sasaki "worked without method" in deciding which patient would receive care next.[4] Patients filled every inch of the hospital. People were throwing up everywhere. He became like a robot, repeating treatment on patient after patient. Miss Sasaki still lies unconscious under the bookshelf and crumbled building. Her leg is only severely broken. She is propped up alongside two badly wounded people and left. Father Kleinsorge sets off for Asano Park. Mr. Tanimoto has crossed town to find his family and parishioners. He apologizes to the wounded as he passes by for not being injured. Only out of luck does he run into his wife and child on the banks of the Ōta River. They split up so that she may return to Ushida and he may take care of the church.

"Details are Being Investigated"

Chapter three chronicles the days after the dropping of the bomb, the continuing troubles faced by the survivors, and the possible explanations for the massive devastation that the witnesses come across.

On August 12, the Nakamuras continued to be sick and discovered the rest of their family had perished. Mr. Tanimoto continues to ferry people from one side of the river to the other in hopes of bringing them to safety from the fires. Father Kleinsorge, weakened by his injuries and previous illness, remains in the Park. He is finally welcomed by the Japanese and no longer feels like a foreigner. Dr. Fujii sleeps on the floor of his destroyed family's home. His left clavicle is broken and is covered in many deep cuts. Ten thousand wounded have shown up at the Red Cross Hospital. Dr. Sasaki is still trying to attend to as many people as possible. All that can be done is to put saline on the worst burns. Dead patients were lying everywhere. Miss Sasaki is still left with no help outside the factory. Finally friends come to locate her body and she is transferred to a hospital.

At the end of the chapter, on August 15, the war is over.

"Panic Grass and Feverfew"

It has been twelve days since the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. Four square miles of the city had been completely destroyed. Since the bombing, Hiroshima has been flooded, which continued chaos and destruction. Many people are now developing radiation sickness and a hatred for the Americans has been festering but decreased once Hiroshima was designated to have safe radiation levels. Father Kleinsorge's wounds were examined and found to have reopened and become inflamed. Even into September, Father Kleinsorge is getting worse. He was taken to the hospital for a high fever, anemia and low leukocyte levels. Mrs. Nakamura still felt nauseated and her hair began to fall out. Once given the okay that the radiation levels in Hiroshima were acceptable and her appearance was presentable, she returned to her home to retrieve her sewing machine but it was rusted and ruined. Mr. Tanimoto also fell ill without any notice. His fever reached 104 degrees Fahrenheit and he was given Vitamin B1 injections to combat the radiation disease. Miss Sasaki remains hospitalized and in pain. The infection has prevented doctors from being able to set her fractured leg. She was discharged from the hospital at the end of April but was severely crippled. Dr. Fujii is still living in a friend's summer home and his injuries have progressed well. He has been noting that many survivors are continuing to experience strange problems. He bought a new clinic in a Hiroshima suburb and once healed began a successful practice. Dr. Sasaki has been studying the progression of patients and assigned three stages to the disease. After six months, the Red Cross Hospital began to function normally. He remained the only surgeon on staff but finally had time to get married in March.

One year after the bombing, Mr. Tanimoto's church had been ruined and he no longer had his exceptional vitality; Mrs. Nakamura was destitute; Dr. Fujii had lost the thirty-room hospital it took him many years to acquire, and no prospects of rebuilding it; Father Kleinsorge was back in the hospital; Dr. Sasaki was not capable of the work he had once done; Miss Sasaki was a cripple.[4]

"The Aftermath"

This chapter was added forty years after the initial publication in The New Yorker.[1]: p66  It appeared in the July 15, 1985 issue of The New Yorker.[5] Hersey returned to Hiroshima to learn what has become of the six survivors. His record of what he found became chapter 5 in subsequent editions of the book.[8] The survivors of the Hiroshima bombing are now referred to as hibakusha (explosion-affected people). The Japanese initially refused to take any responsibility for the American atomic bombing or the population affected. The victims were discriminated against, and many employers refused to hire a hibakusha because they could not work as hard. Their exposure, called "A-bomb sickness" in Japan, left them with chronic weakness, dizziness and digestive issues, among others. In 1954, the Lucky Dragon No. 5 contamination incident created a political movement for the hibakusha and created the A-bomb Victims Medical Care Law. This law allowed for medical attention for the hibakusha and a monthly allowance for them.

Kiyoshi Tanimoto continued to preach the gospel to the people rebuilding in Hiroshima. He was brought to the United States by the Methodist Board of Missions to raise money for his church. On March 5, 1949, his memorandum, Hiroshima Ideas, was published. In 1950, he returned to America for his second speaking tour. On this trip, he spoke to members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Because of his worldwide tours, he was nicknamed "The A-bomb minister". In 1955, he returned to America with more Hiroshima Maidens, women who were school-age girls when they were seriously disfigured as a result of the bomb's thermal flash, and who went to the U.S. for reconstructive surgery. During this trip, he appeared on This Is Your Life with Ralph Edwards. He was surprised to meet Captain Robert Lewis, the co-pilot of the Enola Gay. He died on September 28, 1986.

For a time, Mrs. Nakamura made only enough income to get by and feed her family. She fell ill and could no longer work. To receive treatment, she was forced to sell her sewing machine. She worked odd jobs like delivering bread where she could take three or four days off to recover before working again. She continued to earn just enough to survive. She worked at a mothball factory for 13 years but did not immediately sign up for her health allowance through the A-bomb Victims Medical Care Law. She was invited to be a member of the Bereaved Family Association and traveled the world.

In 1948, Dr. Fujii built a new medical practice in Hiroshima. He was fortunate enough to face no long-lasting effects of the A-bomb sickness. Dr. Fujii died on January 12, 1973.

Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge continued to suffer from radiation exposure. In 1948, he was named the priest at a much larger church in another part of town. He became a Japanese citizen and changed his name to Father Makoto Takakura. He fell into a coma and died on November 19, 1977. There were always fresh flowers on his grave.

Dr. Terufumi Sasaki, who suffered no side effects from the bombing, was haunted by the images of the Red Cross Hospital after the bombing. In 1951, Dr. Sasaki quit working at the Red Cross Hospital. He started his own practice in his hometown and normally performed simple surgeries. He decided to build a geriatric hospital. He continued to regret not keeping better track of all the cremated bodies at the hospital.

Toshiko Sasaki was abandoned by her fiancé after being left crippled. Over a 14-month period she underwent orthopedic surgery to improve the condition of her leg. After working in an orphanage for five years, she became a nun with the Society of the Helpers of Holy Souls. Taking her final vows in 1953, she adopted the name of Sister Dominique. She was quickly noticed for her potential and made a director of the Garden of St. Joseph, an old people's home. She retired in 1978 and was rewarded with a trip to the Holy See. She did volunteer work and spent two years as Mother Superior at Misasa, where she had undergone her novitiate.

Lasting impact

John Hersey

The publication of the article placed Hiroshima and the atomic bomb at the heart of the nuclear war debate. In Hiroshima in History and Memory, Michael J. Hogan writes that Hiroshima created a realization of the magnitude of the event and an entrance into the analysis of the event.[28] It put forward three issues that before had not been faced: the force of modern science, the bomb and the future of nuclear weapons.[28]

The events of the dropping of the atomic bomb live in the psyche of everyone and were brought to gruesome light by Hersey.[28] Hiroshima has and will continue to be "part of our ceaseless thinking about world wars and nuclear holocaust".[29] The effects of the radiation sickness have continued to be a concern for the world and the safety of nuclear power.[30] These concerns have resurfaced since the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor incident.[30] The images brought to the public after the publishing of Hiroshima were revived in the world's eyes.[30][31]

In his essay From Yellow Peril to Japanese Wasteland: John Hersey's "Hiroshima", Patrick B. Sharp also saw Hiroshima as a counterpoint to "Yellow Peril" fiction like Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers, which were "narrated from the point of view of an 'everyman' who witnesses the invasion of his country first hand. As the narrators struggle to survive, we get to witness the horror of the attack through their eyes, and come to loathe the enemy aliens that have so cruelly and unjustly invaded their country." While in Yellow Peril fiction scientists and soldiers who defeat the invaders are portrayed as heroes, Hersey portrays Japanese and German clergymen, doctors, and other ordinary citizens as heroes.[2]

Essays on the Red Circle Authors website included Hiroshima in the Atomic Bomb Literature cycle.[32] Still, relevant anthologies like Nihon no Genbaku Bungaku or The Crazy Iris and Other Stories of the Atomic Aftermath are confined solely to Japanese writers. In her 1953 short story Fireflies, writer Yōko Ōta, a representative of the Atomic Bomb Literature, repeatedly refers to Hersey's report and Dr. Sasaki, whom she calls Dr. X in her story, "the young doctor that John Hersey had written about in Hiroshima".[33]

In 1999, the original article was ranked as the finest piece of American journalism of the 20th century by a panel of experts assembled by New York University's journalism department. [34]

The book was featured on BBC Radio 4's A Good Read in November 2020.[35]

See also

References

  1.  Angell, Roger (July 31, 1995). "From the Archives, "Hersey and History"". The New Yorker. p. 66.
  2.  Sharp, Patrick B. (2000). "From Yellow Peril to Japanese Wasteland: John Hersey's 'Hiroshima'". Twentieth Century Literature46 (2000): 434–52. doi:10.2307/827841JSTOR 827841.
  3.  Raphael, Caroline (August 22, 2016). "How John Hersey's Hiroshima revealed the horror of the bomb"Magazine. BBC News. Retrieved August 27, 2016.
  4.  Hersey, John (1989). "Hiroshima". New York: Random House.
  5.  Jon Michaub, "Eighty-Five From the Archive: John Hersey", The New Yorker, June 8, 2010, np.
  6.  Rothman, Steve. "The Publication of "Hiroshima" in the New Yorker".
  7.  Hersey, John (1973). Hiroshima. Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 69, 96. ISBN 0394548442.
  8.  Michaub, Jon (June 8, 2010). "Eighty-Five from the Archive: John Hersey"The New Yorker. Retrieved February 3, 2014.
  9.  The ABC Radio Network presented readings of the text by well-known actors, whose names were not released in advance, said the network, "in order to focus maximum listener attention on Mr. Hersey's words". The programs were so well-received that they won the George Foster Peabody Award for the Outstanding Educational Program of 1946.
  10.  Hersey's entire text was also broadcast by the BBC in England, as well as by national radio networks in Canada and Australia.
  11.  Gerard J. DeGroot, The bomb: a life. Massachusetts: Harvard Press, 2005.[ISBN missing]
  12.  Silverman, Al (2008). The Time of Their Lives: The Golden Age of Great American Book Publishers, Their Editors and Authors. St. Martin's Press. p. 329. ISBN 978-1-4299-8921-3.
  13.  Hertzberg, Hendrik (March 29, 1993). "Obituary of John Hersey"The New Yorker. Retrieved December 23, 2020.
  14.  "Books: Awakening a Sleeping Giant the Call"Time Magazine. May 6, 1985. Archived from the original on August 22, 2013. Retrieved December 25, 2020.
  15.  Leonard Ray Teel, The Public Press, 1900–1954: the history of American Journalism (Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing, 2006), p. 228.
  16.  Richard Minear, Hiroshima (New Jersey: Princeton Press, 1990), p. 7
  17.  Leonard Ray Teel, The Public Press, 1900–1954: the history of American Journalism (Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing, 2006), p. 228.
  18.  Michael J. Hogan, Hiroshima in History and Memory (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996), pp. 149–52.
  19.  "Occupation and Reconstruction of Japan, 1945–52". Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs, United States Department of State. Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  20.  Richie, Donald (August 16, 2009). "The pure horror of Hiroshima"Japan Times. Retrieved December 25, 2020.
  21.  Richie, Donald (August 16, 2013). "The pure horror of Hiroshima"Japan Times. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  22.  Alperovitz, G. The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb. Vintage Book 1996. pp. 610ff.
  23.  "Steve Rothman HSCI E-196 Science and Society in the 20th Century Professor Everett Mendelsohn January 8, 1997 The Publication of "Hiroshima" in The New Yorker" (PDF).
  24.  "WW2 People's War".
  25.  Gates, David (April 5, 1993). "An All-American Foreigner"Newsweek.
  26.  Simkin, John (September 1997). "John Hersey". Spartacus International. Archived from the original on June 2, 2013. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  27.  John HerseyHiroshimaVintage Books, New York 1989, pp. 11+
  28.  Harvey J. Langholtz, Psychology of Peace Keeping (Westport: Praeger Publishers, 1988), p. 86.[ISBN missing]
  29.  Roger Angell, From the Archives, "Hershey and History" The New Yorker, July 31, 1995, p. 66.
  30.  Eben Harrell, "Thoughts on Fukushima and Hiroshima", The New Yorker, March 22, 2011.
  31.  Matthew Jones, After Hiroshima: The United States, Race and Nuclear Weapons in Asia, 1945–1965 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010) 23–25[ISBN missing]
  32.  "The term 'Atomic Bomb Literature' came into wide use in the 1960s"Red Circle Authors. May 5, 2021. Retrieved October 4, 2021.
  33.  Ōe, Kenzaburō, ed. (1985). The Crazy Iris and Other Stories of the Atomic Aftermath. New York: Grove Press.
  34.  Felicity Barringer (March 1, 1999). "Journalism's Greatest Hits"The New York Times.
  35.  Presenter: Harriett Gilbert; Guests: Jonathan Porritt, Vanessa Kisuule; Producer: Becky Ripley (November 17, 2020). "A Good Read: Vanessa Kisuule & Jonathon Porritt"A Good Read. BBC. BBC Radio 4. Retrieved November 17, 2020.

Further reading

ジョン・ハーシー『ヒロシマ 増補版』、谷本清・石川欣一・明田川融訳
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Amazon カスタマー
5.0 out of 5 stars 皆んなに読んでほしい!
Reviewed in Japan on October 10, 2020
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
素晴らしい本でした。今まで知らなかったことを恥じます。当事者が訳されているので、とても読みやすかったし、事実に迫るものでした。
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fk9704a
5.0 out of 5 stars ジャーナリズムのあり方として、本書が生まれた背景も一緒に知ってほしい
Reviewed in Japan on June 17, 2009
Format: Paperback
本書の内容自体は、ヒバクシャからのインタビューに基づき、その体験を記したもので、他の原爆に関する書籍と比べても特別優れているものでは無いと思います。

しかしながら、本書において特筆すべきは、

1)原爆を落とした国の人間が、原爆は戦争の早期解決の糸口となったというような米国側の主張抜きに、淡々と事実や体験を記載したこと。
2)日本ではGHQによるプレスコードがしかれ、ヒバクシャという言葉はおろか、原爆の事実すら詳細に伝えられていない状況で、米国の雑誌NewYokerは一冊まるごと本稿の記載にあて(本書はそれを書籍化したもの)かつ、即日売り切れるくらいの大きな反響を呼んだものであったこと。

だと思います。
従って、当時の状況、本書や元となったNew Yokerの影響、そして、著者のJohn Herseyの功績を知った上で本書を読むと、ジャーナリズムのあり方を考える上で非常に興味深いものとなると思います。
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Hiroshima Mass Market Paperback – Deckle Edge, 1 October 1989
by John Hersey (Author)
4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (5,380)


Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and bestselling author John Hersey's seminal work of narrative nonfiction which has defined the way we think about nuclear warfare."One of the great classics of the war" (The New Republic) that tells what happened in Hiroshima during World War II through the memories of the survivors of the first atomic bomb ever dropped on a city.

"The perspective Hiroshima offers from the bomb's actual victims is the mandatory counterpart to any Oppenheimer viewing."-GQ Magazine

"Nothing can be said about this book that can equal what the book has to say. It speaks for itself, and in an unforgettable way, for humanity." -The New York Times

Hiroshima is the story of six human beings who lived through the greatest single manmade disaster in history. John Hersey tells what these six -- a clerk, a widowed seamstress, a physician, a Methodist minister, a young surgeon, and a German Catholic priest -- were doing at 8-15 a.m. on August 6, 1945, when Hiroshima was destroyed by the first atomic bomb ever dropped on a city. Then he follows the course of their lives hour by hour, day by day.

The New Yorker of August 31, 1946, devoted all its space to this story. The immediate repercussions were vast- newspapers here and abroad reprinted it; during evening half-hours it was read over the network of the American Broadcasting Company; leading editorials were devoted to it in uncounted newspapers.

Almost four decades after the original publication of this celebrated book John Hersey went back to Hiroshima in search of the people whose stories he had told. His account of what he discovered about them -- the variety of ways in which they responded to the past and went on with their lives -- is now the eloquent and moving final chapter of Hiroshima.
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From Australia

Richard Slade
5.0 out of 5 stars History should not repeat itself
Reviewed in Australia on 23 August 2025
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
What an interesting little book. Thankyou
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Joshua
4.0 out of 5 stars Harsh realities
Reviewed in Australia on 15 October 2016
Verified Purchase
War stories sometimes seem to be a way of humanising the destruction and devastation it leaves behind. This is a great example of before, during and after one of the most destructive and devastating moments in war period.
2 people found this helpful
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Liesl Nel
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read, mind bogling.
Reviewed in Australia on 1 February 2025
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
Scary truthful, a must read for anyone. Tiny book, very quick to read.
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AlistairG
5.0 out of 5 stars The true stories and accounts put you right amoungst the horror of Hiroshima
Reviewed in Australia on 25 April 2021
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Sad, gruesome, awe-inspiring, awful. If you have ever had any doubts about the after-effects of a nuclear explosion and the impacts on those unfortunate to be there, this is a read for you. The book follows individual survivors and tells their stories from day one to years later. Read it and it will leave a lasting impression on you. I found it very insightful and reshaped my thinking about the horrors of war. Highly recommended.
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Bruce Michael
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential History
Reviewed in Australia on 22 October 2020
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This book by John Hersey is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the reality of the historical atomic bombing of Hiroshima in August 1945 from a human perspective. It was this book that took me to make the pilgrimage there myself.
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Monica Mac
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling and honest.
Reviewed in Australia on 17 May 2020
Wow, I have never read a more honest and in-your-face book than this one.

When the atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, it obliterated thousands of people in an instant. It also transformed the lives of the survivors in so many ways.

John Hersey takes us through the experiences of 6 different people who were there that day and survived to live another day. They were all deeply affected in various ways, and sometimes it was the mere fact that when the bomb dropped, they were in one particular place and not another. If someone lived or died, depended on so many things.

This little book can be quite graphic at times, as you would expect, but it is honestly the most compelling book I have ever read about a disaster, ever. Perhaps it is because it is written from the points of view of these six ordinary Japanese people going about their normal lives, that it really hits home.

A must read for everyone, I think.
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Livia
1.0 out of 5 stars Creased front and back covers
Reviewed in Australia on 30 April 2025
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
Review is for item received, not for the contents of the book. Both front and back covers of paperback book came creased and damaged, despite the postal package having no signs of damage.
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Arun.D
2.0 out of 5 stars Unforgettable event; poor publication!
Reviewed in Australia on 21 July 2020
Verified Purchase
This doesn’t do justice to the people or the event! The print is poor; not proof read.. looks like a bad cut, paste and print. Not sure if this is an abridged copy of a copy!!Disappointed!
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From other countries

Dr. John Ryan
5.0 out of 5 stars What Americans and the people of the world should know
Reviewed in Canada on 1 July 2021
Verified Purchase
It is now 75 years since the USA used atomic bombs to destroy the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. These bombs instantly killed about 200,000 people and thousands more died horrible deaths later from the burns and radiation sickness. US leaders did not want the world to know the horrific extent of what they had done. General MacArthur headed the US occupation forces in Japan and would not allow anyone to report what actually happened. However, a year later (1946) John Hersey through the efforts of the fledgling New Yorker magazine managed to get permission for two weeks to view the scene in Hiroshima. In addition to viewing the incredible damage, he did comprehensive interviews with six of the Hiroshima survivors. On his return to the US he wrote an alarming account based on these interviews. His entire story appeared in the New Yorker on August 31, 1946. It was a shock to read--finally the truth came out as to what happened on August 6, 1945. This was reported the world over, and later this story came out as a book, entitled "Hiroshima". What the book does not make clear is that the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was not responsible for ending the war. It was actually the shock of the
Soviet invasion two days later and the total collapse of Japanese forces in Manchuria that caused Japan's surrender on August 15. After all, the US had fire-bombed and destroyed about 100 cities....two more destroyed cities was not overly alarming. What has not been widely reported is that all the major US generals, including Eisenhower and MacArthur, opposed the use of atomic bombs on Japan. It was Truman and his government advisors who decided to use these bombs. And why? It was not to end the Japanese war....Japan had been fully prepared to surrender. The use of these horrific bombs was totally unnecessary and that is what the generals pointed out. The atomic bombs were used on Japan, not to end the war, but for the purpose of showing the Soviet Union that this is what would happen to them if they did not go along with US policies. In fact, the US almost immediately after World War II, started a campaign to build at least 200 atomic bombs for use on the USSR. Official documents are available on this matter, going into full detail...that they would need 6 bombs for Moscow, 6 for Leningrad, etc.
What stopped them from doing this was that the USSR in 1949 developed nuclear weapons of their own. This of course is not revealed in Hersey's book since all he wanted to do was to show what actually happened to Hiroshima that resulted in the death of 140,000 people. As it says in its sub-title, "Everyone able to read should read it." The bombing of Hiroshima was a war crime of the greatest magnitude.
6 people found this helpful
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Kinga Friebe
5.0 out of 5 stars Gut zu verstehen
Reviewed in Germany on 3 November 2018
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
Das Buch kam pünktlich. Vom Inhalt verständliches Englisch aber ein bisschen schreibstill der 50-er Jahren. Würde trotzdem weiter empfehlen.
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Chekov
5.0 out of 5 stars recomendado
Reviewed in Mexico on 21 September 2017
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
Es un libro en el que el autor retrata con una hábil escritura los acontecimientos ocurridos (basado en los testimonios de sobrevivientes) en esa etapa temprana en la cual la humanidad no entendía que los avances científicos son para beneficio de la humanidad y no en detrimento de la misma.
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Marco da Camino Ancona Lopez Soligo
5.0 out of 5 stars Hiroshima, o que de fato aconteceu
Reviewed in Brazil on 26 August 2016
Verified Purchase
Por acaso descobri o livro “Hiroshima”, do correspondente de guerra norte americano John Hersey. Publicado em 31 de agosto de 1946 pela primeira vez como artigo na revista New Yorker, depois em formato de livro e jamais com edição esgotada em inglês desde então, o artigo teve um impacto imenso no seu tempo. Ele reconta o que aconteceu na cidade japonesa de Hiroshima a partir dos minutos anteriores a explosão da bomba atômica às 8h15m do dia 06 de agosto de 1945, pelo relato dos dias, semanas e meses subsequentes de seis sobreviventes. Um padre católico, um pastor metodista, uma costureira viúva com duas crianças, uma vendedora de loja de departamento e dois médicos narram histórias impactantes de tudo o que viveram. As passagens “To Father Kleinsorge, an Occidental, the silence in the grove by the river, where hundreds of gruesomely wounded suffered together, was one of the most dreadful and awesome phonomena of his whole experience. The hurt ones were quiet; no one wept, much less screamed in pain; no one complained; none of the many who died did so noisily; not even the children cried; very few people even spoke. And when Father Kleinsorge gave water to some whose faces had been almost blotted out by flash burns, they took their share and then raised themselves a little and bowed to him, in thanks.” e “Thousands of people had nobody to help them. Miss Sasaki was one of them. Abandoned and helpless, under the crude lean-to in the courtyard of the tin factory, beside the woman who had lost a breast and the man whose burned face was scarcely a face any more, she suffered awfully that night from the pain in her broken leg. She did not sleep at all; neither did she converse with her sleepless companions.” falam por si e fazem pensar. Há outras dezenas com esta capacidade. O poder da bomba foi tal que em uma cidade de 245 mil habitantes, 100 mil morreram nos primeiros dias após a explosão, e outros 100 mil ficaram feridos, dezenas de milhares gravemente. Naquele verão de 1946 mesmo os literatos não tinham um grande entendimento sobre o poder e as consequências do seu lançamento sobre uma cidade, e com o artigo conseguiram algum. Os 300.000 exemplares da edição da New Yorker esgotaram-se rapidamente, e quando Albert Einstein quis encomendar 1000 exemplares para enviar para cientistas ao redor do mundo... não conseguiu. Você consegue. O livro tem cerca de 100 páginas e está disponível em inglês nas livrarias virtuais e no Kindle da Amazon, onde o dicionário de inglês facilita a leitura. Vale muito, te prende pela qualidade e porque ouvimos falar de Hiroshima, mas sem ler o relato não sabemos o que de fato ocorreu, 71 anos depois. Marco da Camino Ancona Lopez Soligo
25 people found this helpful
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gorka zubiaur
5.0 out of 5 stars Indispensable
Reviewed in Spain on 31 July 2021
Verified Purchase
Libro indispensable para saber que pasó y las consecuencias de la Bomba en Hiroshima
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Diluare
5.0 out of 5 stars Indispensible - a necessary read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 June 2008
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
This is one of the most important books of the Twentieth Century. In these times of increased nuclear proliferation, sabre-rattling and political machismo - the human cost of such weapons is often forgotten. Hersey captures the immediate aftermath of the Hiroshima bomb with a detached humanity, showing us what happened without preaching to us. The results are all the more horrifying as we are left to our own inevitable conclusion. This is a book that everybody should read.
8 people found this helpful
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Nando Cozzi
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Reviewed in Italy on 29 October 2016
Verified Purchase
A must read. Journalism as a form of literature. We are driven within the lives of a number of Japanese people in the afermath of the first devastating atom bomb. We follow the events during the first catastrophic days. Still, there is hope for a few.
One person found this helpful
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Chantal PERRIN
5.0 out of 5 stars Hiroshima - John Hersay
Reviewed in France on 1 September 2023
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Un récit poignant de 6 personnes différentes, non connectées, qui se trouvaient à Hiroshima ce 6 août 1945… l’auteur les a suivi pendant des décennies pour discuter de leur vie avant et après … qu’est ce qui a changé dans leurs vies ? ainsi que leurs perceptions de l’après …
A lire absolument …
One person found this helpful
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Sereen Al
1.0 out of 5 stars The book quality
Reviewed in Saudi Arabia on 16 December 2025
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
The print quality is so poor the font faint and hard to read low quality paper and cover and on top of that l've got it in bad shape
Report

ちびた
5.0 out of 5 stars 人間は捨てたものでないと思わせてくれる一冊です。
Reviewed in Japan on 17 December 2015
Verified Purchase
人間は捨てたものでないと思わせてくれる一冊です。
被爆者6人を中心とした記録です。開業医、日赤病院医師、企業の事務員、仕立て屋の婦人、キリスト教会2つの司祭と牧師
巻末には原爆投下後の広島と主要都市の空襲被害状況の写真と地図が表示されています。
特に意見らしいものは表示されていませんが、空襲から原爆投下が一連の流れであったことを示しています。

この一連の作戦には大義名分が必要だったのですが、その1つが「日本人」は欧米人とは違う狂信者だというものでした。
この本は日本人も又欧米人と変わらぬ同じ人間であることを静かにつたえています。

日本側も鬼畜米英として欧米人は日本人とは違うのだと教えました。
その結果被戦闘員の自決など多くの悲劇をうみました。
同じ人間であることを認識することこそが 最大の戦争抑止力だと思います。

ここに登場した人達の奮闘は苦境のなかでの人間の力を、そしてそれを切り取って紹介した著者の視点は、私達に人間は捨てたものでないと思わせてくれる本だとおもいます。
20 people found this helpful
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Chad Oberholtzer
5.0 out of 5 stars A genuine, timeless classic...
Reviewed in the United States on 27 December 2014
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
In his classic book, "Hiroshima," John Hersey simply and powerfully tells the story of six residents of Hiroshima who were dramatically and traumatically impacted by the dropping of the atomic bomb near the end of World War II. I've always been fascinated by World War II history and have deeply appreciated works of art like "Band of Brothers" or "Ghost Soldiers," which help to bring humanity and complexity into our perceptions of war, which are too often overly abstract and neatly simplistic (good guys vs. bad guys, hopefully the good guys won). But "Hiroshima" does something even more challenging but no less important for American readers, bringing that humanity and complexity from the perspective of the "enemy," in this case Japanese doctors, clergy, mothers, and office workers with no particular political or military associations.

The central strength of the book is its gripping account of the lives of these six individuals, setting the stage before the bomb was dropped, describing the events that immediately followed the immense explosion, and following the impact of that cataclysmic event in the ensuing months and years. In fact, a final chapter, written 40 years after the original publication of the book, gives another update for the six featured people, four decades down the road. And, in all of this, Hersey manages to tell a powerful, vivid story without getting preachy or political. At the end of the day, we get a sense of the devastation, a hint of the suffering, a glimmer of the confusion, and just a faint taste of the impact of that first atomic bomb. It's a worthy experience for anyone, from any nationality or political persuasion.

I do have one minor quibble with Hersey's approach. With only six subjects to describe, I found it odd and unnecessarily limited in scope that two of them were physicians and two of them were Christian clergy (though one was Catholic and one was Protestant). Had he found a more diverse cross-section of Japanese society, I think that the main strength of the book would have been augmented. But this critique is truly insignificant within the context of the power of Hersey's work.

Ultimately, part of my experience in appreciating this book comes from a cultural upbringing that celebrated the United States' military might and historical successes with an abstract triumphalist tone, failing to bother to understand the devastating effects that war brings to all sides of any military conflict. As I've studied and learned as much military history as I can, my perspective has thankfully become more nuanced, and I'm mindful of the dangers of looking at an event like the bombing of Hiroshima as nothing more than a good old fashioned Yankee whooping. "Hiroshima" helps to counter that cheap view of human worth by shedding light on the horrors of war, from the often untold perspective of the defeated. It's true that the victors get to write history, and I'm glad that Hersey took the brave step to make sure that the impact on the vanquished is at least known and understood on some level. He does so without making sweeping political implications, without suggesting that the Hiroshima bombing was necessarily a mistake. He merely says that this event happened, that it was tragically awful for many people, that real people suffered and died, and that we would do well to be aware of those realities when we think back in history at war. I'd recommend the book to absolutely anyone who can see the potential value of being stretched and challenged in that direction.
54 people found this helpful
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Vishnu eriyat
5.0 out of 5 stars Going beyond the title
Reviewed in India on 3 November 2025
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
The book speaks about the human experience of war through the eyes of few who were at the centre of it. It also portrays the resilience we show to experiences which can lead to disillusionment.
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===
Chekov
5.0 out of 5 stars recomendado
Reviewed in Mexico on 21 September 2017
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
Es un libro en el que el autor retrata con una hábil escritura los acontecimientos ocurridos (basado en los testimonios de sobrevivientes) en esa etapa temprana en la cual la humanidad no entendía que los avances científicos son para beneficio de la humanidad y no en detrimento de la misma.
Report
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Marco da Camino Ancona Lopez Soligo
5.0 out of 5 stars Hiroshima, o que de fato aconteceu
Reviewed in Brazil on 26 August 2016
Verified Purchase
Por acaso descobri o livro “Hiroshima”, do correspondente de guerra norte americano John Hersey. Publicado em 31 de agosto de 1946 pela primeira vez como artigo na revista New Yorker, depois em formato de livro e jamais com edição esgotada em inglês desde então, o artigo teve um impacto imenso no seu tempo. Ele reconta o que aconteceu na cidade japonesa de Hiroshima a partir dos minutos anteriores a explosão da bomba atômica às 8h15m do dia 06 de agosto de 1945, pelo relato dos dias, semanas e meses subsequentes de seis sobreviventes. Um padre católico, um pastor metodista, uma costureira viúva com duas crianças, uma vendedora de loja de departamento e dois médicos narram histórias impactantes de tudo o que viveram. As passagens “To Father Kleinsorge, an Occidental, the silence in the grove by the river, where hundreds of gruesomely wounded suffered together, was one of the most dreadful and awesome phonomena of his whole experience. The hurt ones were quiet; no one wept, much less screamed in pain; no one complained; none of the many who died did so noisily; not even the children cried; very few people even spoke. And when Father Kleinsorge gave water to some whose faces had been almost blotted out by flash burns, they took their share and then raised themselves a little and bowed to him, in thanks.” e “Thousands of people had nobody to help them. Miss Sasaki was one of them. Abandoned and helpless, under the crude lean-to in the courtyard of the tin factory, beside the woman who had lost a breast and the man whose burned face was scarcely a face any more, she suffered awfully that night from the pain in her broken leg. She did not sleep at all; neither did she converse with her sleepless companions.” falam por si e fazem pensar. Há outras dezenas com esta capacidade. O poder da bomba foi tal que em uma cidade de 245 mil habitantes, 100 mil morreram nos primeiros dias após a explosão, e outros 100 mil ficaram feridos, dezenas de milhares gravemente. Naquele verão de 1946 mesmo os literatos não tinham um grande entendimento sobre o poder e as consequências do seu lançamento sobre uma cidade, e com o artigo conseguiram algum. Os 300.000 exemplares da edição da New Yorker esgotaram-se rapidamente, e quando Albert Einstein quis encomendar 1000 exemplares para enviar para cientistas ao redor do mundo... não conseguiu. Você consegue. O livro tem cerca de 100 páginas e está disponível em inglês nas livrarias virtuais e no Kindle da Amazon, onde o dicionário de inglês facilita a leitura. Vale muito, te prende pela qualidade e porque ouvimos falar de Hiroshima, mas sem ler o relato não sabemos o que de fato ocorreu, 71 anos depois. Marco da Camino Ancona Lopez Soligo
25 people found this helpful
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gorka zubiaur
5.0 out of 5 stars Indispensable
Reviewed in Spain on 31 July 2021
Verified Purchase
Libro indispensable para saber que pasó y las consecuencias de la Bomba en Hiroshima
Report
Translate review to English

Diluare
5.0 out of 5 stars Indispensible - a necessary read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 June 2008
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
This is one of the most important books of the Twentieth Century. In these times of increased nuclear proliferation, sabre-rattling and political machismo - the human cost of such weapons is often forgotten. Hersey captures the immediate aftermath of the Hiroshima bomb with a detached humanity, showing us what happened without preaching to us. The results are all the more horrifying as we are left to our own inevitable conclusion. This is a book that everybody should read.
8 people found this helpful
Report

Nando Cozzi
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Reviewed in Italy on 29 October 2016
Verified Purchase
A must read. Journalism as a form of literature. We are driven within the lives of a number of Japanese people in the afermath of the first devastating atom bomb. We follow the events during the first catastrophic days. Still, there is hope for a few.
One person found this helpful
Report

Chantal PERRIN
5.0 out of 5 stars Hiroshima - John Hersay
Reviewed in France on 1 September 2023
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Un récit poignant de 6 personnes différentes, non connectées, qui se trouvaient à Hiroshima ce 6 août 1945… l’auteur les a suivi pendant des décennies pour discuter de leur vie avant et après … qu’est ce qui a changé dans leurs vies ? ainsi que leurs perceptions de l’après …
A lire absolument …
One person found this helpful
Report
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Sereen Al
1.0 out of 5 stars The book quality
Reviewed in Saudi Arabia on 16 December 2025
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
The print quality is so poor the font faint and hard to read low quality paper and cover and on top of that l've got it in bad shape
Report

ちびた
5.0 out of 5 stars 人間は捨てたものでないと思わせてくれる一冊です。
Reviewed in Japan on 17 December 2015
Verified Purchase
人間は捨てたものでないと思わせてくれる一冊です。
被爆者6人を中心とした記録です。開業医、日赤病院医師、企業の事務員、仕立て屋の婦人、キリスト教会2つの司祭と牧師
巻末には原爆投下後の広島と主要都市の空襲被害状況の写真と地図が表示されています。
特に意見らしいものは表示されていませんが、空襲から原爆投下が一連の流れであったことを示しています。

この一連の作戦には大義名分が必要だったのですが、その1つが「日本人」は欧米人とは違う狂信者だというものでした。
この本は日本人も又欧米人と変わらぬ同じ人間であることを静かにつたえています。

日本側も鬼畜米英として欧米人は日本人とは違うのだと教えました。
その結果被戦闘員の自決など多くの悲劇をうみました。
同じ人間であることを認識することこそが 最大の戦争抑止力だと思います。

ここに登場した人達の奮闘は苦境のなかでの人間の力を、そしてそれを切り取って紹介した著者の視点は、私達に人間は捨てたものでないと思わせてくれる本だとおもいます。
20 people found this helpful
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Chad Oberholtzer
5.0 out of 5 stars A genuine, timeless classic...
Reviewed in the United States on 27 December 2014
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
In his classic book, "Hiroshima," John Hersey simply and powerfully tells the story of six residents of Hiroshima who were dramatically and traumatically impacted by the dropping of the atomic bomb near the end of World War II. I've always been fascinated by World War II history and have deeply appreciated works of art like "Band of Brothers" or "Ghost Soldiers," which help to bring humanity and complexity into our perceptions of war, which are too often overly abstract and neatly simplistic (good guys vs. bad guys, hopefully the good guys won). But "Hiroshima" does something even more challenging but no less important for American readers, bringing that humanity and complexity from the perspective of the "enemy," in this case Japanese doctors, clergy, mothers, and office workers with no particular political or military associations.

The central strength of the book is its gripping account of the lives of these six individuals, setting the stage before the bomb was dropped, describing the events that immediately followed the immense explosion, and following the impact of that cataclysmic event in the ensuing months and years. In fact, a final chapter, written 40 years after the original publication of the book, gives another update for the six featured people, four decades down the road. And, in all of this, Hersey manages to tell a powerful, vivid story without getting preachy or political. At the end of the day, we get a sense of the devastation, a hint of the suffering, a glimmer of the confusion, and just a faint taste of the impact of that first atomic bomb. It's a worthy experience for anyone, from any nationality or political persuasion.

I do have one minor quibble with Hersey's approach. With only six subjects to describe, I found it odd and unnecessarily limited in scope that two of them were physicians and two of them were Christian clergy (though one was Catholic and one was Protestant). Had he found a more diverse cross-section of Japanese society, I think that the main strength of the book would have been augmented. But this critique is truly insignificant within the context of the power of Hersey's work.

Ultimately, part of my experience in appreciating this book comes from a cultural upbringing that celebrated the United States' military might and historical successes with an abstract triumphalist tone, failing to bother to understand the devastating effects that war brings to all sides of any military conflict. As I've studied and learned as much military history as I can, my perspective has thankfully become more nuanced, and I'm mindful of the dangers of looking at an event like the bombing of Hiroshima as nothing more than a good old fashioned Yankee whooping. "Hiroshima" helps to counter that cheap view of human worth by shedding light on the horrors of war, from the often untold perspective of the defeated. It's true that the victors get to write history, and I'm glad that Hersey took the brave step to make sure that the impact on the vanquished is at least known and understood on some level. He does so without making sweeping political implications, without suggesting that the Hiroshima bombing was necessarily a mistake. He merely says that this event happened, that it was tragically awful for many people, that real people suffered and died, and that we would do well to be aware of those realities when we think back in history at war. I'd recommend the book to absolutely anyone who can see the potential value of being stretched and challenged in that direction.
54 people found this helpful
Report

Vishnu eriyat
5.0 out of 5 stars Going beyond the title
Reviewed in India on 3 November 2025
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
The book speaks about the human experience of war through the eyes of few who were at the centre of it. It also portrays the resilience we show to experiences which can lead to disillusionment.
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EL TIBURON
4.0 out of 5 stars CUESTIONABLE DECISIÓN MATAR PARA QUE NO HAYA MÁS MUERTES.
Reviewed in Mexico on 2 December 2020
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HISTÓRICO EVENTO QUE CONMOVIÓ AL MUNDO PERO, ¿SE JUSTIFICA TAK MASACRE?
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Anne Lo
5.0 out of 5 stars Hommage aux victimes des bombes nucléaires
Reviewed in France on 24 February 2024
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John Hersey relate de manière poignante les conséquences inacceptables d’une bombe nucléaire faisant des centaines de milliers de victimes, mortes sur le coup ou devant survivre avec des graves problèmes de santé
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Louise
5.0 out of 5 stars Hiroshima 80
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 August 2025
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I don't know why I've never read this before but the 80th anniversary week seemed the right time. It says everything and I couldn't put it down. Humankind never learns.
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jp
5.0 out of 5 stars Testimonianze uniche e preziose
Reviewed in Italy on 23 September 2015
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Un vero capolavoro. Storie di personaggi veri calati nella fornace di Hiroshima.
E' appena stato celebrato il 70° anniversario della strage di Hiroshima e Nagasaki , per chi non ha mai letto niente è una lettura obbligata.
Non privatevene.
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Shashwat
5.0 out of 5 stars An Absolute Brilliance
Reviewed in India on 28 August 2021
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It is a wonderfull book describing the horror and terror faced by Hiroshima and the people living in Hiroshima.
It has detailed description of the blast and while reading you will feel that the victims are telling their stories sitting beside you.
A must read book for the people interested in Hiroshima happenings.
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Kei
5.0 out of 5 stars if we can rationalize this, we can rationalize anything.
Reviewed in Japan on 29 August 2016
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たまたまネット新聞で知り読みました。この作家も題名も今まで聞いたこともありません。100ページにも満たないですが、とてもよかったです。この作家はジャーナリストとして実際の広島に原爆投下後に訪れています。1946年にニューヨーカーに出版されセンセーショナルであったそうです。あのアインシュタインは何百冊ものニューヨーカーを購入して配っていたそうです。原爆が投下されて2年くらいのあとにこのようなルポがでたとは驚きでした。原爆投下や戦争に関してはいろいろ考えがあると思いますが、このルポはただ何人かの人物の原爆投下の日の出来事を書いています。読んでいて呑みこまめるような文章です。
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Guenther
5.0 out of 5 stars Unfassbar!
Reviewed in Germany on 2 September 2019
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Werden wir aus diesem Chaos irgendwann etwas lernen? Nein! Die Produktionen der neuesten Bomben laufen auf Hochtouren! 🙏
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Important to know
Reviewed in Canada on 17 February 2025
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EVERYONE needs to read this book. As war atrocities go, it's very bad.
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Timothy Miyahara
5.0 out of 5 stars Two Warnings: the Edition and the Moral
Reviewed in the United States on 3 November 2015
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The Kindle edition is missing Chapter 5. This is the eBook edition published by Pickle Partners (ASIN B00QU4BBTY). Chapter 5 is the John Hersey follow up 40 years later telling the story of the main characters after the original magazine article in 1946. The kindle edition does not disclose that it includes only the 1946 magazine article text. Read a physical edition published after 1989 for a more complete picture.
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John Hersey's "Hiroshima"
After reading a note written by a German Jesuit priest who survived the atomic bomb at Hiroshima, John Hersey located him and was introduced to five other survivors and documented their stories. When I first read the book, I found the story moving, shocking and disturbing. The vivid depictions of the survivors and their struggle to live through the next few days are eye-openers. The new chapter added 40 years later provides some closure to the story of their lives.

The prose is simple yet the reader is able to get a good grasp on events and environment. John Hersey wrote Hiroshima in a neutral tone and style. He told interviewer Steve Rothman, "The flat style was deliberate and I still think I was right to adopt it. A high literary manner, or a show of passion, would have brought me into the story as a mediator. I wanted to avoid such mediation, so the reader's experience would be as direct as possible."

The issue of the magazine was prepared in great secrecy, even the clerks and staff of The New Yorker magazine itself were not let in on the secret, and the weekly proofs for publication were seen only by the editors. Part of the reason was the subject. While in Japan, John Hersey could not actively seek interviewees in Hiroshima since the atomic bomb's aftereffects were heavily censored by the U.S. Army of Occupation in 1946. Newspapers in Japan were not allowed to mention the atomic bombs and the survivors, and even poetry mentioning the events was illegal. Attempts by the Nippon Times to publish Hersey's article in Japan were blocked in 1946, but copies of the book in English surreptitiously made their way to Tokyo in 1947. It was eventually allowed to be published there in 1948.

The New Yorker magazine originally intended to serial publish the story, but made an unprecedented decision to devote the entire issue to John Hersey's story. When the article was first published it sold out within hours. People were hawking the magazine for up to $20 (a great sum in those days) and the publisher was unable to fulfill Albert Einstein's order of 1000 copies.

Many critics on sites like Amazon complain Hiroshima does not give the reasons for the U.S. employing the atomic bombs and so is anti-American. Hersey's purpose was not to delve into the argument of whether the bombs should have been used, but to report on its effects and the stories of the survivors. This book was originally intended as a long magazine article and it did not have the space to cover all arguments and nuances. The debate of whether the bombs should or should not have been used really didn't exist when Hersey wrote Hiroshima in 1946. There was no question about using the atomic bombs. When the bombs were dropped, America and her allies were in the midst of a total war with Japan, an embrace of death that neither belligerent was willing or could afford to relax. The horrors and struggles of war were still fresh in everyone's minds. This was a new horror, the face of nuclear war to which Americans were vastly ignorant until John Hersey made the world aware.

I also read complaints at Amazon that the article was unbalanced because Hersey did not list Japan’s war crimes, especially the Nanking Massacre, or that because of these war crimes the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki got what they deserved. These arguments are specious at best and immoral at worst. There can be no doubt the Japanese military and the Japanese government were responsible for many war crimes, perhaps even on a greater scale than Nazi Germany. The Nanking Massacre, the Bataan Death March, the Laha Massacre, and the Sandakan Death March to list but a few. The victims of man's inhumanity to man, whether they died in the bombing of Rotterdam, the Holocaust, the Nanking Massacre, the Bismarck Sea incident, the Coventry Blitz, the firebombing of Dresden, the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, or the Malmedy Massacre - few, if any, of the victims deserved death. The people were all sons and daughters; some were husbands, wives, brothers or sisters. Each one was a human being with a name, hopes and dreams. Each has a story and should be respected and remembered.

War is savage and brutal, but one tragedy does not justify the next, and the killing of one prisoner or civilian does not justify the killing of another.

Every victim deserves to be remembered and have their story told.

Hiroshima gives a face to the victims of the atomic bombs. This is their story.
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ivan h.g
5.0 out of 5 stars I just loved it
Reviewed in Spain on 29 July 2013
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It is just great. One of the best chronicles I've ever read in my life. I would like to read more books by this author when I find them.
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bh
5.0 out of 5 stars Bom livto
Reviewed in Brazil on 12 June 2020
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Relatos muito interessantes de sobreviventes à bomba. Esclarece que além dos que foram incinerados non Centro da cidade, os que estavam nos subúrbios sofreram enormemente...l
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Y.S
5.0 out of 5 stars Hiroshima 評価
Reviewed in Japan on 26 June 2014
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この本の存在をアメリカの近代史のテレビ番組で知りました。
米国では知名度の高い本です。
しかしながら、外国人ジャーナリストにより書かれたことが日本人にあまり知られていません。
原爆を知るためには必要な本の1冊です。
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Juniorsy
5.0 out of 5 stars Une histoire à connaître
Reviewed in France on 25 February 2017
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Si le livre est en anglais, la lecture est possible si on a un niveau intermédiaire.

Cette histoire de l'humanité est à connaître. Par ailleurs les six cas choisi par l'auteur nous dit tout sur Hiroshima
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Siddharth
5.0 out of 5 stars Master piece
Reviewed in India on 23 January 2022
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Everyone needs to read this book, it's a roller coster ride of emotions, and it's a must read for everyone out there.
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JACQUELYNN D PARISE
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely riveting!
Reviewed in the United States on 18 July 2025
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Very well written and very informative. This should be required reading in all schools. Most people have no idea of the horrible consequences of this bomb.
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Gianni Satta
5.0 out of 5 stars Hiroshima
Reviewed in Italy on 31 August 2015
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Ottimo libro,espreme appieno le sensazioni delle persone dopo lo scoppio della bomba, rende perfettamente visibile nella mente di chi legge i luoghi dove si evolve il racconto.
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Jonathan Coller
5.0 out of 5 stars Flowers among the Ashes
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 June 2009
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There are no moral judgements in this compelling book. It is an account of how humanity coped in an inhumane situation. It is a 'beautifully' harrowing account of how six hibakusha (explosion-affected persons) dealt with a seemingly impossible situation. While Hersey's writing neither condemns nor justifies the dropping of the atomic bomb it forced me to contemplate the morality of the decision to do so. War is between soldiers and sailors. There can be no justification for children having their eyes melt down their face or nurses having their limbs blown off. The carpet bombing of cities like Dresden was just as indiscriminate and just as much an act of futility when the war was already won as Hiroshima was, but the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was conducted as a laboratory experiment. The bomb was dropped to justify the billions of dollars spent on its development, out of a desire for revenge, and to end the war quickly. Japan had already been defeated, it was not necessary. Yes, Japan was responsible for the war. Yes, Japan committed war atrocities of an unthinkable nature. Yes, Japan was guilty of war crimes. But this should not obscure the fact that the victors committed war crimes as well. The dropping of the bomb was one of them. We owe a lot to America, as does Japan, but the attempt to cover up the truth of what happened in Hiroshima by the US Administration in the aftermath of war remains a shameful episode in their history. Your view on the use of the Atomic bomb may differ from mine but that does not matter. The book is not polemical and should be read as a story of hope amid despair. Flowers among the Ashes.
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JOSE WELLINGTON DE OLIVEIRA LIMA
5.0 out of 5 stars Sr.
Reviewed in Brazil on 14 September 2020
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Um sofrimento da Humanidade para nunca ser esquecido.
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Aila
5.0 out of 5 stars Good
Reviewed in Spain on 16 April 2019
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Good
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Adam c
5.0 out of 5 stars Day in the life of 5-6 survivors
Reviewed in Canada on 28 June 2021
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This was a narration of the events of the day the bomb was dropped on hiroshima. It narrates it from the perspective of 5-6 survivors, and adds details that wont be know for years later, and that and individual on the ground couldnt have known. Its a great short story, 200 pages, about the day and the effects the bomb had on people, and how Japan reacted. Some parts are a big gruesome for some people, all the people talked about ended up in hospitals one way or another, so there is medial talk and many deaths. But its told from a emotionless point of narration, i think it was well told.
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Cliente GUSTAVO
5.0 out of 5 stars Produto perfeito
Reviewed in Brazil on 4 July 2018
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Produto perfeito embaladinho parabéns amazon! Preços excelentes só compro aqui...
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rolmops
3.0 out of 5 stars livre
Reviewed in France on 17 June 2023
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En anglais
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クラッシック音楽大好き
5.0 out of 5 stars オリヴァー.ストーンとHIROSHIMA
Reviewed in Japan on 20 February 2014
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
この本のレヴュは海外Amazonにも多くの5点満点評価があります。この本は、私はもう45年も前の高校生の時に、英語の先生に勧められて読みました。そして、昨年の夏、BSでオリヴァー.ストーンが語るもうひとつのアメリカ史の一環として、「オリヴァー.ストーンとヒロシマ」が放映。そして、このジョン.ハーシーの名著に登場する被爆者のご子孫との対談がありました。その放映の夜、すぐに、Amazonにこの本を注文。その時は10冊ほど、在庫があったのですが、翌朝には在庫ゼロとなっていました。この本の内容は他のレヴュアや海外Amazonのユーザにお任せするとして、この本の日本Amazon在庫がすぐにゼロになったことに、何かしらの『深い感慨』をもったことをご報告します。名著です!!
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M. Carmen López López
3.0 out of 5 stars Historical document based on the testimonies of six survivors
Reviewed in Spain on 8 September 2015
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First-hand testimonies from survivors of the Hiroshima horror. Vivid description of the days after the atomic bomb.
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BOOK ADDICT
4.0 out of 5 stars WELL KNOWN EVENT RARELY WRITTEN FROM A HUMAN PERSPECTIVE
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 February 2011
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
This was an interesting piece of writing,as that what it real is. John Hersey writes about six people and how the dropping of the A bomb affected them at the time, and how the rest of their lives panned out. It was well written and very informative, particularly about the Japanese people that were affected, and the rather hang down attitude the Americans had towards disclosing what happened on that evenful August day in 1945.
It should be read by everyone, and what is concerning is that all during the Cold War,people in authority never seemed to realise the power of atomic bombs, and the affect that it would have on ordinary people. The legacy of the Horishima bomb lived on in the bodies of the people who witnessed the catastrophic event, and their unborn or never to be born children.
An enlightening read that is not too long to get lost in detail and trivia.
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john
5.0 out of 5 stars quality
Reviewed in the United States on 23 November 2025
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very enlightening and FULL OF histoRICAL FACTS
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Amazon Customer
3.0 out of 5 stars Three Stars
Reviewed in India on 20 February 2017
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The print is not worth the price.
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Cristina Galli
2.0 out of 5 stars HIROSHIMA
Reviewed in Italy on 4 September 2015
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SONO SICURA CHE MI SAREBBE PIACIUTO SE AVESSI POTUTO LEGGERLO! PULTROPPO AND' IN INGLESE E PER ME POTREBBE ESSERE ARABO. NELLA SCELT ADEL LIBRO NON ERA CHIARO CHE FOSSE IN LINGUA ORIGINALE E NON IN ITALIANO. YOUR QUESTA POCA CHIAREZZA DOVESTE DRUNK RIMEDIO!
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Ronald Papa
3.0 out of 5 stars A little repetitive
Reviewed in Canada on 19 January 2026
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Kind of predictable and repetitive
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DUVAL
3.0 out of 5 stars Power and Consquence
Reviewed in the United States on 20 March 2013
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
John Hersey has written a horrific account of five survivors from the split-second the bomb exploded until their death years later. I understand the book was revised at some point to include additional information. His detail is unique but he spends considerable time describing how one of the priests transported people back and forth between the river and the evacuation area. Once you read about the trip three or four times it feels like a re-run. It was amazing to me that he was able to interview five survivors and contact them several years later. I was interested in reading more about the rescue efforts by the government and then the United States. No contingency plan on the planet could have prepared Hiroshima for the terrible death and destruction of the atomic age. I must ask myself; why did the United States drop a second bomb? Our leaders wiped out a city of nearly 400,000 people and did not even let the radioactive dust settle before dropping another one. What did the world's people learn after the first bomb? Well, we learned that two is better than one, we can build a bomb of our own and we are willing to drop one again. It is a bad sign that sane countries have a bomb but now insane contries are pursuing nuclear development. Hiroshima is a short read and I recommend the book for one reason; to remind us that atomic bombs will destroy the earth. No one wins in atomic war. Read John Hersey's book and remind yourself what happens when atomic fusion is released on flesh and bone. Pray to God that bombs are turned into plowshares.
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Mateo Jesús Silvente Ramírez
2.0 out of 5 stars Mala edicion
Reviewed in Spain on 7 July 2019
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Mal está en inglés. Pésima edición
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Daniel Vasquez
5.0 out of 5 stars Arrived on time
Reviewed in Canada on 21 December 2023
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Great book
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amanlisman
5.0 out of 5 stars tout le monde qui s'interresse à la géopolitique devrait lire ce livre
Reviewed in France on 18 January 2015
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On peut voir dans des images toute l'horreur de la guerre sur nos écrans et dans les magazines, mais c'est sous d'un texte que la véritable énormité de la tragédie humaine devient réelle. Ce livre peut rendre le lecteur pacifiste, voire militant anti-guerre.
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A Movie Buff
5.0 out of 5 stars Mans Inhumanity to Man
Reviewed in India on 8 September 2015
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This brings out in such detail the disaster that befell Hiroshima. I have been to the museum and Peace Park as as part of an AOTS program have had the opportunity to see some of the Japanese documentaries on the same.
As a human being we should be ashamed of what was achieved, even if we did not know the possible effects at that time. It is a well of sadness, specially when you consider that one of the reasons Hiroshima was selected was it was still unscathed at this time of WW2.
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Andrew E Hawthorne
3.0 out of 5 stars Too matter-of-fact, too short, not what I had hoped
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 September 2016
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Considering that this book provides a victims-eye view of one of the most massively destructive events in history, and does so from not one but several perspectives, it somehow failed to engage me. The user experiences seemed to be devoid of emotion, recounted factually as a series of events, somehow skimmed over rather than explored in depth, and I failed to develop a connection with the people who were the principle subject of the book.
I had also expected that the book would inspire a sense of the scale of the tragedy. Whilst a few facts about the scale of the blast and its effects were interspersed throughout the story, again they were simply factual, flat and uninspiring rather than instilling a sense of awe and tragedy.

The switching between characters and time series also lent a sense of discontinuity to the story. Apeing the sort of context switching seen in Hollywood movies, it was a clumsily executed literary device that did not help the story flow or provide any depth to the subject.

Interesting enough, but only because ofbtge subject matter. Ultimately let down by the flat and uninspiring narrative and too-brief narrative. An opportunity missed, which was disappointing.
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David Bale
5.0 out of 5 stars Read This Book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 August 2025
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Amongst all the literature about the atomic bomb, this book gives the human picture, the scene on the ground and its continuation to today.
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Lompin
4.0 out of 5 stars document historique
Reviewed in France on 21 November 2015
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Un grand succès un peu oublié aujourd'hui d'un journaliste américain.
Mérite d'être lu pour rappeler le vécu des survivants plus ou moins mal en point pendant le mois qui ont suivi le bombardement.
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Nupur jain
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in India on 26 July 2017
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The quality of the pages isint what i expected!
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Anette Halbestunde
1.0 out of 5 stars  Anette Halbestunde
1.0 out of 5 stars It's really a pity that I have to evaluate a novel on such a serious and tragic topic with just one star
Reviewed in Germany on 30 May 2018
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But the problem is not even the story itself, which actually seems to be really poignant. It's much more the Kindle version, which is full of spelling errors and also has a strange layout, which makes it impossible to read the book. Too bad I'm gonna get a hard copy here.
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in Canada on 6 February 2016
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Came quickly a
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B767Captain
4.0 out of 5 stars Incredibly Moving, Certain to keep you Listening
Reviewed in the United States on 5 September 2017
Format: Audio CDVerified Purchase
This review is specifically for the Audio CD version of the book. I purchased it after a trip to Hiroshima with my family, and was interested in the aftermath of the Atomic-bomb, and the rebirth of this large metropolitan city.

John Hersey is masterful in his description and accounts of (6) persons who survived the A-bomb and their memories of the event. The initial story is the day of the bombing, August 6th,1945, and the descriptions, details and accounts of survivors is extremely graphic. The (6) survivors are a Jesuit priest, a surgeon, a desk clerk, a Methodist pastor, a Doctor and a tailor's widow. They were each terrorized by the explosion and mass destruction, but showed exemplary courage to survive, help others and recall the day's tragic timeline. Over 80,000 people died initially from the blast, and 20,000+ died in the days after from radiation sickness and explosive trauma or injuries sustained. The author returned to the city forty years later to interview those same (6) survivors and updates readers on their lives since that fateful day. Each survivor had a tinge of survivor's guilt, but displayed courage and perseverance in moving forward with their lives. The fate of each survivor is described in the final chapter.

It is emotionally moving and terribly heart-wrenching listening to the graphic details of death, destruction and horrible burn/blast injuries sustained by inhabitants of this large, industrial city in southern Japan. George Guidall is the narrator and is magnificent in his rendering of the pages of this fine work. I highly recommend this audiobook to anyone who wishes to learn more about the first A-bomb dropped on a major population center, and it's subsequent aftermath. It is detailed, painfully graphic and very touching to hear the survivor's accounts. Notice to listeners: Extremely graphic detail of human burn injuries and blast trauma.
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Sam
5.0 out of 5 stars Must read
Reviewed in India on 24 June 2020
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A must read.
The author writes about the life of people who were affected by nuclear bomb.
Not only how their lives were immediately affected but also how their entire life had changed.
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Micky McGuinness
5.0 out of 5 stars A strong soft voice in the silence
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 October 2016
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Having read a number of books in the last 12 months which deal with the Japanese treatment of prisoners of war, civilians, indigenous populations, pretty much anything and anyone that got in their way… culminating with reading the Rape of Nanking Rape Of Nanking I felt that I should really read something that would show some of the suffering of the ordinary Japanese.

Hershey’s book follows the lives of six individuals who survived the sheer devastation caused by the dropping of the Atomic Bomb in Hiroshima. He manages to achieve this in such a way that his narration is barely noticeable, it is as if the characters are telling their own story.
In this way we get to experience the horror and suffering through the eyes of the victims themselves.

This book is not about shock and gore; it is a good example of how a story told gently and with compassion can sometimes have a far greater impact.

I’d recommend it to anyone who wants to read a good well written account of what happens to ordinary people when nuclear and atomic bombs are used on them.

Those people who are looking for a history of the Manhattan Project or for information on the war in the Pacific will not find it here… but that was not the book Hershey was trying to write…
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Sherry
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
Reviewed in Canada on 14 July 2022
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I was amazed at what the people went through reading this was so very sad I can't imagine the pain they felt.
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Franck BODELLE
5.0 out of 5 stars Bel ouvrage, Très instructif
Reviewed in France on 5 September 2019
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Ce livre,d'un point de vue historique et humain m'en apprend beaucoup
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Linda Linguvic
5.0 out of 5 stars The horror of the atomic bomb and a wake-up call for the future
Reviewed in the United States on 20 October 2010
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified Purchase
Published in The New Yorker in 1946, "Hiroshima" was the result of in-depth personal interviews with six of the victims of the atomic blast that hastened the surrender of the Japanese in WW2. These victims were ordinary people going about their ordinary lives. Then, on a hot August day, there was a bright flash of light and the world they lived in changed forever. It is estimated that 100,000 people were killed in the first blast and, over the next few years, more than another 100,000 died as a result of radiation poisoning. Through up-close and personal interviews, the victims Hersey interviewed became very real people to me and I will never forget their accounts of the dreadfulness they experienced. They included a Japanese Methodist minister who was educated in the United States, a war widow and mother of three young children, a German Jesuit priest, an office clerk and two different doctors. Through their eyes I saw the dead and dying, the horrible burns, the wounds that didn't heal, the destruction of homes and the displacement of families, the lack of medical care and the absolute devastation everywhere. Through this article, the American people became acutely aware of the horrific affects of nuclear weapons.

Forty years later, the author returned to Hiroshima to again interview these same six people. One of the women had become a nun, another woman suffered with radiation sickness for years, one of them tried to erase all memory of the bombing, one had become a prosperous doctor in his own private clinic, one of them suffered from his wounds for the rest of life, and one of them wound up touring the United States to raise money to rebuild his church and help young girls injured in the blast to have reconstructive surgery. And, during all these years, two of these interviewees had died.

The impact this small book had on me went well beyond its 152 pages. I will never forget it and can't help wondering about what the result will be now that so many countries have nuclear weapons. This book makes it all real. It is both an excellent piece of journalism as well as a wake-up call for the future.
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Dunc
4.0 out of 5 stars why we shouldn’t use nuclear weapons
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 July 2025
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Heart rending story line as the bomb goes off and what happens next. Makes you think about what we did then to end the Japan war. Interesting review of lives following the bomb but a bit light. This was a tiny bomb compared to what we have now and hopefully the lives lost then will ensure it never happens again.
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Dragonfly
4.0 out of 5 stars Hiroshima: A Tale of Heroes
Reviewed in the United States on 2 May 2013
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Hiroshima is an inspirational classic that displays the accounts given by survivors of the atomic bomb created by the United States. The reader is able to follow these victims through each crippled step during the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima in 1945. This novel specifically focuses upon the hardship of 6 people; two doctors, two women, and two religious men. The story starts hours before the bombing, includes personal accounts during the bombing, days after the bombing, and this edition includes tales of the survivors 40 years after the bombing in Hiroshima. The reading truly displays compassion and human connection. The atomic bomb killed 69,000 people and left 66,000 others slowly dying or severely injured. The reader has the privilege to learn how the characters were able to help and save the injured, whether those injured consisted of family, friends, or strangers. The characters must cope with conflicting morals when protecting themselves, and also attempting to help as many others as possible. I mainly enjoyed reading Hiroshima because it provided an impactful perspective on society. Although it can be easy to lose hope in a corrupt-seeming humanity, these tales display the compassion of real people, still alive today! The way this novel is put together is completely innovative effective. It seems to shed light on humble heroes who risked their already destroyed lives to help others. One, and possibly the only reason I disliked Hiroshima, was a sense of disorganization. It follows six characters, which is effective in showing different perspectives, although the shift between characters' viewpoints seemed scattered at times, and it became easy to confuse the characters with one another. Besides this minor fault, I strongly recommend others to read Hiroshima. As stated before, it enlightens the reader, displaying the unbelievable strength and compassion of human beings. Many barely know the truth, and the facts behind the event this book focuses on. Even those who do have more knowledge on the tragedy should read Hiroshima in order to obtain a new view, perhaps even a new opinion on the bombing. The book is moving to say the least, and should inspire everyone who reads it. I willingly give Hiroshima a rating of "four-out-of-five" stars. It is a wonderful collection of history and will positively, even educationally, impact everyone who experiences it.
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Good service
Reviewed in the United States on 24 July 2025
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All good
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Kyle Sessoms
5.0 out of 5 stars Chilling stories from ground zero
Reviewed in the United States on 30 June 2025
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This book gives you several first-person perspectives from survivors who were in Hiroshima the morning the atomic bomb was dropped during WWII. I would definitely recommend this book to anyone interested in learning what the people of Hiroshima experienced when exposed to an atomic detonation.
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JJ
5.0 out of 5 stars A moving story of survivors
Reviewed in the United States on 25 April 2025
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After visiting Hiroshima this year and seeing how these gracious, resilient people have transformed this city, I was eager to reread Hersey's great work. It is a moving account that will not fail to make an indelible impression on you. Focusing on just six survivors of the bombing, Hersey creates a tightly written and compassionate picture that will stay with you long after you finish the book.
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James M. Hargreaves_UK
5.0 out of 5 stars The most harrowng book you will ever read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 February 2024
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What words can I come up with for what is the one report every literate person should read, avoid the easily forgetting glitzy films such as Oppenheimer, I have only loathing and contempt for every scientist and all those remotely associated with the Manhatten project.

It is hard to imagine and believe the scenes that unfold within the pages, yet what you are reading is a matter of fact, an on-the-ground report taken one year after the event, these are the eyewitness accounts from Japanese citizens on the ground and not a work of fiction.

Please read with some caution and share it with others, we should all read this.
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Erol
4.0 out of 5 stars journalistic style
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 August 2024
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Very good account - could be more account of the impact of the bomb from a scientific and what changes could be anticipated
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Written originally in 1946, book tells what REALLY was happening to people
Reviewed in the United States on 1 February 2025
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It was a painful read because it does let the reader into the horrific aftermath - physical, emotional, afterward stigma - work problems, legal red tape.
6 survivors lives are shared. Newest addition adds what has become of these survivors since 1946. INCREDIBLE read. Compassionate.
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J. Pilon
1.0 out of 5 stars Its like if a 12 yr old wrote a paper on the topic
Reviewed in the United States on 22 January 2026
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I know this was written in 1946 but how in the world is this an author of like 20 books? He writes like he is a freshman in high school. Is English even his native language? The writing style is very odd. Skip, its not going to tell you anything new that you cant imagine by being hit my a nuke. The 1000 "mr/mrs/ms" are also not needed. Sample below of the writing style.
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Kevin Bailey
4.0 out of 5 stars essential reading
Reviewed in the United States on 10 September 2024
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It is of the utmost importance to remember the stories of the victims of this unnecessary act of war that is too often, and falsely, associated with bringing peace.
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K Berk
5.0 out of 5 stars Good service
Reviewed in the United States on 30 May 2025
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Book delivered in timely manner. Book is in good condition
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Officer Dibble
5.0 out of 5 stars The balancing act
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 June 2017
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A momentous piece of journalism exposing the effects of nuclear weapons ably reviewed by others.

Yet isn't it dreadful how decades of exposure to media bias can introduce cynicism even to a piece such as this? Looking back at Mr Hersey's work, it would be difficult to create a more 'deserving' cross-section of survivors to a Western audience in 1946. Two medics (one from the neutral Red Cross hospital), a Reverend (with pre-war friends in the USA), a war widow struggling with three small children (whose soldier husband died in the fall of Singapore and therefore less associated with later wartime atrocities), a Jesuit priest (one of literally a handful of Westerners in the city), a young female clerk whose father does war work ('making rubber ear plugs for gun crew' ; surely the most non-controversial 'war work' ever devised?).

Mr Hersey's compelling book describes the appalling impact on many others, including soldiers, yet his selection of the key dramatis personae is interesting. If you haven't read it, you should.
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 September 2016
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No one can put into words how to explain the feelings and the after thoughts of reading this book. If anyone can, they are not justified at all! This is an excellent piece of literature, which should never be forgotten. And read by everyone! The book certainly made me feel sad, lucky, angry, sad again and humble, to name just a few. Books of this caliber should be read, studied and evaluated in all schools. It should be made compulsory in our national curriculum. This book, Anne Franks complete journal, the documentary series "The complete history of World War two" and any holocaust accounts written or books alike should be read by everyone. Not just out of a interest point of view, but as a humanity point of view and as a warning that history cannot repeat itself. History should not be forgotten and the lessons learnt should be understood by everyone.

"Never was so much owed, to so many, by so few"
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TheHighlander
5.0 out of 5 stars Another View
Reviewed in the United States on 31 October 2002
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In America we are never shown the human side or the after affects of the Atomic Bomb. We are only told that it ended the war and saved countless American soldiers lives.
This book sheds some light on the human side and the Japanese view of what happened. The fact that nearly 100,000 people had been killed or doomed in one blow and 100,000 more injured in a city of 245,000 is something to contemplate in itself. The human tragedy is explored a bit in this book. The wounds, the eybrows burned off, the eyes melted out of their sockets, skin hanging from faces and hands. Vomiting and burn patterns on bodies. It can be a bit gruesome but it is important to know the devestation that this bomb brought. The after effects of radiation poisoning and the lifelong health problems of many of the survivors are explored. The increased rates in cancer and luekemia are discussed.
This is an eye opening book that tells the story of 6 different survivors. The horrors in the aftermath of the Atomic explosion. The human side, the emotions, the injuries, the recovery and rebuilding. Told through the eyes of normal everyday people. The story is engrossing.
I highly recommend this book be read by many. Although I think they should read others on the subject as well to see the entire picture. This book covers the human perspective but not the political or military perspective. A very interesting read.
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Steve
5.0 out of 5 stars perhaps it is time to revisit the tragedy of Hiroshima
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 June 2022
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This is a clever little book which draws people into the lives of 6 people who, by varying degrees of luck, survived America's first A bomb strike. What seems to me quite remarkable is the extent to which the Japanese accepted their situation with a stoicism hard to imagine today. The only reservation that I have is that the survivors are drawn from a small pool, linked by religion, medicine and acquaintance. One or two individuals from outside this circle would have given more balance, I think. Nevertheless, it manages to convey in simple everyday terms, without histrionics, the terrible impact of one bomb upon the lives of thousands of innocent people.
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Jean Cork
5.0 out of 5 stars Literary Journalism at its Finest
Reviewed in the United States on 12 June 2007
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Published in 1946, this remarkable article or book was based on interviews with survivors of the first city to be destroyed by a single weapon. John Hersey was a war correspondent during World War II. His "Hiroshima" has been rated as number one in The Top Ten Works of Journalism in the United States in the 20th Century, as determined by The New York University journalism faculty and a panel of critics that included David Brinkley and Morley Safer. "Hiroshima" took over the entire August 30, 1946 issue of "The New Yorker" and the issue sold out within hours. After reading this rather slim book, I can understand why. It relates the stories of six survivors in a very interesting and readable way. Hersey makes us feel the impact of the bomb and its horrors in a very personal way, yet he doesn't go overboard on the gore. There is a follow-up study almost 40 years later, and we visit these same characters again. Surprisingly, none of the six hated the U.S.; they understood that drastic measures were neeeded to end a war that the Japanese obsessively fought; throwing reason out the window. The book can be read in an evening, but you will want to reread it, as well.
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j. sheldrake
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 January 2025
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Gripping account of the impact of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
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Anne
5.0 out of 5 stars A review of WW2 history.
Reviewed in the United States on 11 February 2024
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I actually read this book years ago...and needed a refresher. I actually met Col. Paul Tibbets, pilot of the Enola Gay, that flew to Hiroshima to drop the bomb, at a lecture that he gave in CT. He never regretted his action because he felt like he had saved at least another 400,000 American lives by doing this deed.
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jodie jd
4.0 out of 5 stars Historical Must Read
Reviewed in the United States on 26 November 2020
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This is a must-read for historical and humanitarian reasons. It brings to "life" the horror of the first nuclear strike on a populated city. No photos. But you see it, feel it, experience it. I am convinced that Hiroshima and Nagasaki are the reasons the world has not used atomic weapons ever since, in spite of their massive proliferation for 75 years.

I take away 1 star because the back cover of the book claims it includes a final chapter written 40 years later. It DOES NOT. I found that odd and very disappointing. I was very much looking forward to reading it.
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grizziesmom
5.0 out of 5 stars Real history that should be required reading
Reviewed in the United States on 26 January 2016
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If you never read another book about what war really is, read this one. Stunning, unforgettable, amazing what we are capable of doing to our fellow man. This is the type of history book that your children need to be reading; one that is reality based, one that creates discussion and reflection on what they value in life and how they view the world events of yesteryear and today. One word picture that I cannot get out of my mind is the description of the shadows of objects and people being emblazoned on structures by the flash of the bomb. The objects and people were incinerated but their presence in place and time was recorded for the survivors and observers. I found Hiroshima thought provoking and although I do not read/study historical events in depth as a rule, I find that I am moved to learn more about our history before someone tries to re-write it and make the truth disappear before our very eyes.
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Book Butterfly
4.0 out of 5 stars Historical interesting
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 August 2022
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I found it interesting to read the perspective of people whom suffered the atomic explosion & its after effects. This book isn't sensationalist & its style may seem out dated to those reading it now. But for me was worth reading.
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Desdichado
5.0 out of 5 stars PLEASE READ THIS BOOK!
Reviewed in the United States on 6 September 2016
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John Hersey's HIROSHIMA is, quite simply, the most devastating book I have ever read. I had known about it for years; I therefore assigned it as required reading for DOCUMENTARY FILM AND LITERATURE OF MODERN WAR, a course I designed and taught for the Honors Program of a flagship state university. Hersey, a war correspondent, went to Hiroshima shortly after the atomic bomb "Little Boy" had been dropped on the populous city. Hersey's descriptions of the flattened buildings and the terrible wounds the survivors suffered appalled my students and me. People were vaporized, with merely their shadows left on walls. Survivors suffered the horrifying afflictions of radiation poisoning, their skin hanging from their bodies. Please after reading the book type HIROSHIMA PEACE PARK MEMORIAL into Google, which will direct you to a site where you can leave messages and tributes.
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CD
5.0 out of 5 stars We must remember
Reviewed in the United States on 19 June 2021
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Well written and poignantly presented, this book introduces and humanizes the tragedy and horrors of the dropping of the bomb on Hiroshima by giving the readers sight through the eyes of its survivors. Their perseverance, and perspective are invaluable inspiration and testimony to the resilience of the human spirit in the face of unspeakable horrors. Our best hope of not repeating the evils of our past is to understand, acknowledge, accept and never forget that they happened, and to rise to a better future for humanity. “Hiroshima’s” survivors give us a glimpse of how it can be done.
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Love it, hate it, read it, watch it.
4.0 out of 5 stars We all have a duty to know
Reviewed in the United States on 27 November 2023
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History is not always pretty, but we should try to understand the effects of political decisions, no matter how distressing.
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