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  • Hi All,
    Five chapters into ( Banzai You Bastard's by Jack Edwards & Jimmy Walter ).

    The story of the hell-mine of Kinkaseki ranks with the "Bridge over the River Kwai" as one of the most appalling episodes of the war in the Far East. Yet until now it has been known only to a few. At Kinkaseki, on the island of Taiwan, Allied POWs were forced by the Japanese to slave underground, year after year, in conditions of extreme danger, subjected to savage floggings if weakness or illness prevented them from digging their required quota of copper ore. Starved, tortured, ravaged by dysentery, they died in hundreds.

    Written by one of the men who survived, who has since fought ceaselessly for compensation, "Banzai, You Bastards!" describes with moving simplicity the indomitable spirit of men who refused to be beaten into submission. An important first-hand document of history, it publishes for the first time a copy of the secret order from the Japanese High Command to massacre all POWs and 'leave no traces'. This order, known only to a select, secret committee of prisoners, which included the author, hung over them for nearly a year before the A Bombs and until they were released by the US Marines, after the surrender of the Japanese in September 1945.

    [This book] records one of the most terrible aspects of warfare. Its closing words "None of us should forget" have been choses for use on six War Memorials to date in Thailand, Singapore, New Zealand and Yeovilton, England. -- Back jacket cover

    (Synopsis Courtesy Google Books)
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    EDIT:- Nine chapters in, I knew it was a brutal regime under the Japanese but this makes for some horrific reading.

    The descriptions of what occurred makes you realise that the way the war was brought to a close would have literally saved many thousands or more from the same fate, even though it took the destruction and taking of thousands by two Atomic bombs.

    Sadly you can only draw one conclusion we as a species have only our imagination to halt us with inflicting pain and death onto others across the globe for serving no other purpose than showing who is in charge at any particular instance.

    Geoff.
    Last edited by 1batfastard; 30-06-2023, 04:50 PM.

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    • Just read Home by Penny Parkes, just ok
      Granny on the Game in Sheffield

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      • Now on Coming Up For Air by George Orwell. Eclectic or what?
        Granny on the Game in Sheffield

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        • Just finished A Terrible Kindness by
          ​​​​​​Jo Browning Wroe - very good
          Granny on the Game in Sheffield

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          • Mrs Fytton's Country Life - Mavis Cheek
            Granny on the Game in Sheffield

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            • The Holiday by T M Logan.

              And when your back stops aching,
              And your hands begin to harden.
              You will find yourself a partner,
              In the glory of the garden.

              Rudyard Kipling.sigpic

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              • Hi All,
                I am Halfway through Philip Glenister's - Things Aint What They Used To Be published in 2008. Being totally honest I suppose you have to be of a certain age to get the feeling of this book, recalling your own memories of the items brought back to life by your own memories from the era he is recalling.

                Fitting well within the bracket and recalling the same emotional attachment with the these items he does as all those memories long forgotten flow back to the present day from the forgotten depths of your psyche.

                Either that or I am a sad old bugger!...........:- )

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                Geoff.
                Last edited by 1batfastard; 26-07-2023, 06:42 PM.

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                • Hi All,
                  Finished that little book of reflection of and already a chapter into Victorian Villainies, I bought this book for the wife many moons ago when I had the silly belief Sue would read it back in the eighties and she loved it so much that it has been secreted in the attic since we moved in 25Yr's or so ago......

                  Anyway having decided to clear all the unwanted junk this book surfaced and It is up to me to do the honourable thing and read it, four stories/Books in one sitting.
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                  Fraud,Murder,Political Intrigue and Horror In Four Stories Of Victorian Villainy.

                  The Great Tontine, Considered to be Hawley Smarts best book concerns the unforeseen dangers of trying to make money in a lottery.

                  Arthur Griffiths made a special study of the French police and his sardonic amusement over their methods is evident in the classic train thriller The Rome Express.

                  In The FOG Richard Harding Davis’s ingeniously plotted novel is one of the very best accounts of foggy Victorian London.

                  Haunted by figures of strange Horror Richard Marshes The Beetle sheds fascinating sidelights on the forgotten aspects of Victorian age.

                  All in All, a splendid selection of works rescued from dusty oblivion.

                  ( The above courtesy of the inner dust jacket notes )

                  EDIT:- Well I got through it and rather all in all I enjoyed this compendium of books with I would say the Beetle being my favourite. I can add that the Victorian English is very non Pc, these days the woke brigade would have a field day trying to ban this published work as for them certain words that are used would have them in a meltdown...........

                  Geoff.
                  Last edited by 1batfastard; 31-08-2023, 07:19 PM.

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                  • Dog's Best Friend : A Brief History Of An Unbreakable Bond, by Simon Garfield
                    Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
                    Endless wonder.

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                    • can I be boring and add a gardening book in here?

                      The seed Detective by Adam Alexander. Excellent book - in fact I have it as an Audible book too so I can listen at night.

                      Adam is a seed guardian for the Heritage seed library as well as a collector of seeds from around the world.

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                      ntg
                      Never be afraid to try something new.
                      Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark.
                      A large group of professionals built the Titanic
                      ==================================================

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                      • The Snack Thief - Andrea Camilleri

                        An Inspector Montalbano Mystery ( the Italian detective series)

                        Great read and worth watching on TV too.
                        "Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple

                        Location....Normandy France

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                        • Just finished The Chapel In The Woods by Dolores Gordon-Smith. A Jack Haldean 1920's mystery.
                          Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
                          Endless wonder.

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                          • Hi All,
                            It doesn't matter what you are reading does it ? You are either educating yourself or just enjoying a good read where you can forget about the outside world and all the nonsense that is being forced upon us a good way to wind down after being wound up by life yes ?........

                            I started yesterday and am three chapters into Stephen Coonts - Saucer, the 1st in a trilogy of books.

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                            A team of surveyors working in the Sahara happen upon an object buried deep in the rock. The object turns out to be a flying saucer and it is older than the rock it is buried in - 140,000 years old at least.

                            Rip, a student working with the team is keen to find out as much about the flying saucer as possible. But so are many other people, including the US Military, a team working for a billionaire American businessman and a group of Arabs.

                            Rip foils their attempts to commandeer the craft with the help of a disillusioned female pilot called Charley. Together they steal the saucer and Charley takes them both into orbit. Rip¿s plan is to take the saucer to his uncle¿s Missouri farm - but first he has to avoid being tracked down by everyone else. (Courtesy of Amazon)

                            Geoff.
                            Last edited by 1batfastard; 31-08-2023, 07:30 PM.

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                            • Hi All,
                              I just Started BILLY by Pamela Stephenson. I have been a fan of the ' Big Yin ' since I bought the Dbl Live Album Solo Concert in 1976 not long after leaving school and earning my first wages.
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                              Billy, the revelatory, poignant, and wildly entertaining biography is written by the woman who knows him best--his wife. With insight and objectivity, Pamela Stephenson, a clinical psychologist, takes us through the heartbreaking and hilarious life of a comic legend and what made him the man he is today. The descriptions of Scottish life evoke the poignancy of the Ireland in Angela's Ashes as she tells of the troubled, abused. and desperately poor child in the docklands of Glasgow who grew up to shock and awe audiences around the world with his notoriously bawdy humor and a remarkable range of performances as a brilliant comic, a serious actor who played opposite Dame Judi Dench in Mrs. Brown, and the star of the U.S. television show Head of the Class. (Courtesy Google Books)

                              Geoff.




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                              • That’s a great book Geoff!
                                "Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple

                                Location....Normandy France

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