FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS
by James Bradley
Amazon.com Book Review by Gregory McNamee
In a month's time, more than 22,000 Japanese soldiers would die defending a patch of ground a third the size of Manhattan, while nearly 26,000 Americans fell taking it from them. The battle was a turning point in the war in the Pacific, and it produced one of World War II's enduring images: a photograph of six soldiers raising an American flag on the flank of Mount Suribachi, the island's commanding high point.

Bradley, who died in 1994, never mentioned his feat to his family. Only after his death did Bradley's son, James, begin to piece together the facts of his father's heroism, which was but one of countless acts of sacrifice made by the young men who fought at Iwo Jima.
Flags of Our Fathers recounts the sometimes tragic life stories of the six men who raised the flag that February day — one an Arizona Indian who would die following an alcohol-soaked brawl, another a Kentucky hillbilly, still another a Pennsylvania steel-mill worker — and who became reluctant heroes in the bargain. A strongly felt and well-written entry in a spate of recent books on World War II, “Flags” gives a you-are-there depiction of that conflict's horrible arenas — and a moving homage to the men whom fate brought there.


