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Hiroshima (A Borzoi book)
Author: John Hersey
Publisher: A.A. Knopf
Category: Book

Buy Used: $5.00



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 198 reviews
Sales Rank: 6582756

Edition: 1st
Pages: 117

ASIN: B0007FKTB8

Publication Date: 1973
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: light wear to dust jacket . unmarked text . tight binding .1946. stated borzoi book

Also Available In:

  • Mass Market Paperback - Hiroshima
  • School & Library Binding - Hiroshima
  • Audio Cassette - Hiroshima
  • Audio CD - Hiroshima
  • Audio Cassette - Hiroshima
  • Audio Cassette - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - HIROSHIMA.
  • Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - Hiroshima (Penguin Modern Classics)
  • Hardcover - Hiroshima
  • Library Binding - Hiroshima
  • Mass Market Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Mass Market Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Hardcover - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Hardcover - Hiroshima
  • Audio Cassette - Hiroshima
  • Hardcover - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Hardcover - Hiroshima (G.K. Hall Large Print Perennial Bestseller Collection)
  • Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Hardcover - Hiroshima
  • Library Binding - Hiroshima
  • Hardcover - Hiroshima (Curley Large Print Books)
  • Paperback - Hiroshima (Curley Large Print Books)
  • Audio Cassette - John Hersey Reading Hiroshima
  • Audio Cassette - Hiroshima (Unabridged Narration, No 82016)
  • Audio CD - Hiroshima
  • Audio Cassette - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - Hiroshima (Armas Y Letras) (Spanish Edition)
  • Audio Download - Hiroshima (Unabridged)
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
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  • Paperback - Hiroshima (Bantam classic)
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Unknown Binding - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Audio Cassette - Hiroshima (unabridged)
  • Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Mass Market Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Mass Market Paperback - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - Hiroshima (Reprinted from the New Yorker, the Issue of August 31, 1946)
  • Paperback - HIROSHIMA.
  • Hardcover - Hiroshima
  • Paperback - HIROSHIMA.
  • Paperback - HIROSHIMA (TWENTIETH CENTURY CLASSICS S.)

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
When the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, few could have anticipated its potential for devastation. Pulitzer prize-winning author John Hersey recorded the stories of Hiroshima residents shortly after the explosion and, in 1946, Hiroshima was published, giving the world first-hand accounts from people who had survived it. The words of Miss Sasaki, Dr. Fujii, Mrs. Nakamara, Father Kleinsorg, Dr. Sasaki, and the Reverend Tanimoto gave a face to the statistics that saturated the media and solicited an overwhelming public response. Whether you believe the bomb made the difference in the war or that it should never have been dropped, "Hiroshima" is a must read for all of us who live in the shadow of armed conflict.

Product Description
When the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima in August 1945, killing 100,000 men, women and children, a new era in human history opened. Written only a year after the disaster, John Hersey brought the event vividly alive with this heart-rending account of six men and women who survived despite all the odds. A further chapter was added when, forty years later, he returned to Hiroshima to discover how the same six people had struggled to cope with catastrophe and with often crippling disease. The result is a devastating picture of the long-term effects of one bomb.


Customer Reviews:   Read 193 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A very good book   October 7, 2008
This is a book I would recommend for anyone to read. By reading the book you get a personal perspective on the ones affected by the bombing. This edition has an additional chapter, written years later, where the author gives an update on the people in the book. Very good read!


5 out of 5 stars Satisfaction Guaranteed   August 20, 2008
I was very satisfied with the level of customer service that I received from Amazon.com. It is definetly a site that I will be coming back to from here on. As a student I am always on the lookout for a better and cheaper deal, so this is definetly one of the first places that I will go when I have to get more books for the next semester.


5 out of 5 stars Great book   August 9, 2008
I thought this book was great because it teaches you how people live in other parts of the world after you change their lives forever and it is very entertaining. At no point in the book did i think of putting it down because it was so good. It really captures the reader.


5 out of 5 stars Testament to both man's violence and unselfish nurturing   July 3, 2008
There are works of fiction and nonfiction that transcend their genres. This is one of those works, one that should be required reading for high school students, or, at the very least, for college students, if it isn't already. The horror that was the A-bomb unleashed unbridled power over the city of Hiroshima. Arguments could be made for both the necessity for the bomb to end the war, as well as the unnecessary and catastrophic violence unleashed.

Either way you argue, Hersey's Hiroshima shows the true nature of the bomb from when it was dropped, the after effects, and the resulting long term medical problems the Hibukusha had to live with for the rest of their lives. I was awestruck at the description of what had happened, at times shaking my head at the power of such a bomb. Soldiers who had their eyes melted out of their sockets, people whose skin was slophing off, skinned burned off leaving raw and puss covered skin.

These are of course present throughout Hersey's account, for how could we see what the survivors of Hiroshima went through if the descriptions are not there as well? We see unselfish and caring individuals putting their own health and safety at risk to help others worse off. We see the strength of human nature to struggle on despite the hopeless feeling that imbedded into all who were present.

Hersey does a great job showing what happened, with people whose lives are all interrelated and connected in sundry ways, as well as to show how their lives carried on in the years after the A-bomb had been dropped. This is most certainly a recommend for young and old alike, and I would recommend it to all, regardless of the genre's they prefer to read.

5 stars.



4 out of 5 stars It might be different if it was written today....   May 14, 2008
 3 out of 12 found this review helpful

My daughter is reading it for a 9th grade class. I skimmed through looking for the telltale signs of Modern Liberal indoctrination. Unlike her Human Geography book, which is loaded with Socialist thinking, this book is genuine in following several characters as they dealt with their lives after the destruction.

As some other readers pointed out (I didn't read every review), Hersey doesn't dwell on the moral issues. It's a genuine look at the characters. It's written in a rather dry style that lets the characters stories speak for themselves and allows the reader to form his or her own conclusions.

(Now, if this book was written today or maybe by someone else, I wouldn't be surprised if the book was more of anti-war/anti-human tome that is typical of today's Modern Liberals. I'm talking about the now-normal attacks on Western Civilization, American exceptionalism, Conservatism, Bush, etc. I wouldn't be surprised if they found a way to say Halliburton was involved in the building of the bomb or that one of Cheney's uncles was key. If you want to learn about Modern Liberals, watch the video at YouTube called "How Modern Liberals Think" by Evan Sayet. As Amazon pulls urls off these reviews, just go to YouTube and search on "Evan Sayet" and pick the "How Modern Liberals Think" video.)

Anyways, if you want a book on the human aspects of some of the people bombed, then you may enjoy this book. Just remember, the alternative to bombing was many more deaths.


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