9 best books about the Pacific War

World War II is sometimes thought of as primarily a fight against Nazi Germany, with the war in the Pacific as an after-thought. Fortunately, there is no shortage of worthwhile books about the Pacific War.

7. "Flags of Our Fathers," by James Bradley

Dislodging Japanese troops from their island fortresses was a ferocious and bloody undertaking. Iwo Jima is particularly notable in this regard – of the 20,000 Japanese troops stationed on the atoll, all but 200 died because they preferred death to surrender. James Bradley’s Flags of Our Fathers  (with Ron Powers, Bantam Books, 2000) focuses on the famous flag raising on Mt. Suribachi. But it also illustrates how the savage fighting affected the American soldiers who fought there after they returned home. Unsparing and deeply moving, Bradley’s book reminds us that post-traumatic stress syndrome was a serious – if little recognized – danger long before it had a name.

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