Give Us This Day

By Sidney Stewart

Give Us This Day - Sidney Stewart
  • Release Date: 2015-11-06
  • Genre: Military History
Score: 5
5
From 12 Ratings

Description

Includes The Prisoners Of War In Japanese Hands During World War Two pack with 130 photos, plans and photos.

In Give Us This Day a young Oklahoman, a survivor of Bataan, reveals the terrible truth about a little-known aspect of the Pacific war as he experienced it from the beginning in the Philippines. He was a captive of the Japanese for more than three years; he knew one after another all the torments of confinement in conditions of primitive barbarism. True though his story is, it almost defies belief. With touching simplicity he recounts the stark and shocking details of one of the most shameful features of that war — the treatment of American soldiers who fell into the hands of the Japanese. At first Stewart hated his captors, but in the end hatred gave place to a dawning comprehension that the Japanese were as different from us as the men of Genghis Khan.

“It is one of the most harrowing and debilitating chronicles that I have read. . . . He describes the ordeal brilliantly; he harbors no resentments apparently, and he has emerged from an inferno of bestiality with utter serenity.” — Maxwell Geismar, Saturday Review

“An impressive and moving book.” — David Dempsey, New York Times

“His is no ordinary prisoner-of-war story; better written than most, it contains no tales of swashbuckling defiance. . . . The force of this book is its testimony to the indomitable strength of the human spirit.” — Manchester Guardian

“The plain narrative of this story would by itself have been fascinating, but this book is far more than a story, it is a work of art.” — André Siegfried, Academie Francaise

“Sidney Stewart’s composed narrative is one of the most noble documents ever penned by a prisoner of war. The companions he writes about remained men to the end, until at last only one man remained; he survived to write this unforgettable, this magnificent story.” — George Slocombe, New York Herald Tribune [Paris]

Reviews

  • Tears

    4
    By Robert's Daughter
    My father, Private Robert Shultz was in the Bataan Death March and worked a copper mine for the Japanese. He was not an active part of my life so I heard none of the stories. Reading this made me more aware of the mental issues the men had and gave me a better understanding of why he could not be the husband and father that was expected he be. I cried for him and for me and for everyone that was touched by this moment in history.