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The Last Kamikaze: The Story of Admiral Matome Ugaki

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Last Kamikaze: The Story of Admiral Matome Ugaki

Contributors:

By (Author) Edwin P. Hoyt

ISBN:

9780313360657

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

21st January 1993

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

European history
Second World War
Modern warfare
Asian history
Biography: philosophy and social sciences

Dewey:

940.544952092

Prizes:

Winner of Military Book Club Selection 1993 (United States)

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

256

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 235mm

Weight:

454g

Description

This is the story of a man and a Navy--Vice Admiral Matome Ugaki and the Imperial Japanese Navy. By 1945 the Imperial Navy was physically destroyed and Admiral Ugaki was given the task of defending the Japanese homeland against attack, and he sent hundreds of kamikazes against the American naval forces operating around Okinawa. After Emperor Hirohito announced Japan's surrender on August 15, Ugaki stripped off his insignia of rank, climbed into a torpedo bomber, and flew to Okinawa, where he intended to crash into an American ship. But like so many of the other kamikazes, his mission was fruitless, his plane was shot down by American nightfighters. But Admiral Ugaki died, as he has promised to do, in the fashion of the thousands of young men he had sent to their deaths. Vice Admiral Matome Ugaki was the only high official of the Imperial Japanese Navy to have left a significant record, in the form of a diary started during the preparations for the China Incident, and kept throughout the war--from the planning phase of 1940, through the Pearl Harbor attack, and up until Japan's surrender. Hoyt draws on the diary and numerous other accounts by admirals and historians to create a picture of a Japanese Navy that began in a position of strength but was eventually destroyed by powerful Allied forces, shattering Japan's drive for conquest.

Reviews

An insider's intriguing perspectives on an ill-starred belligerency, plus savvy commentary and continuity from a veteran military historian. * Kirkus Reviews *
A strange, stirring tale, sympathetically related from the Japanese point of view. * Publishers Weekly *
Hoyt, a noted author and historian who specializes in Japan, China and the War in the Pacific, uses the personal diary of Vice Admiral Matome Ugaki to document the eventual destruction of the Japanese Navy at the hands of Allied forces throughout World War II. The author begins by detailing Ugaki's role in the preparation and planning of the attack on Pearl Harbor, and then provides this officer's insights into such battles as Midway and Guadalcanal. Military historians will appreciate this insider's perspective into the collapse of the Japanese military and its eventual surrender, which culminates in Ugaki's final kamikaze mission against the wishes of Emperor Hirohito. * Reference & Research Book News *

Author Bio

EDWIN P. HOYT is a popular military historian who has written widely on the Pacific War, Japan, and China. He is the author of Japan's War, The Militarists, and The Rise of the Chinese Republic. His most recent book with Praeger is Hirohito: The Emperor and the Man (1992).

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