9780743264662-0743264665-Yokohama Burning: The Deadly 1923 Earthquake and Fire that Helped Forge the Path to World War II

Yokohama Burning: The Deadly 1923 Earthquake and Fire that Helped Forge the Path to World War II

ISBN-13: 9780743264662
ISBN-10: 0743264665
Author: Joshua Hammer
Publication date: 2011
Publisher: Free Press
Format: Paperback 336 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780743264662
ISBN-10: 0743264665
Author: Joshua Hammer
Publication date: 2011
Publisher: Free Press
Format: Paperback 336 pages

Summary

Yokohama Burning: The Deadly 1923 Earthquake and Fire that Helped Forge the Path to World War II (ISBN-13: 9780743264662 and ISBN-10: 0743264665), written by authors Joshua Hammer, was published by Free Press in 2011. With an overall rating of 4.3 stars, it's a notable title among other Japan (Asian History, World History, Earthquakes & Volcanoes, Earth Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent Yokohama Burning: The Deadly 1923 Earthquake and Fire that Helped Forge the Path to World War II (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Japan books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Yokohama Burning is the story of the worst natural disaster of the twentieth century: the earthquakes, fires, and tsunamis of September 1923 that destroyed Yokohama and most of Tokyo and killed 140,000 people during two days of horror. With cinematic vividness and from multiple perspectives, acclaimed Newsweek correspondent Joshua Hammer re-creates harrowing scenes of death, escape, and rescue. He also places the tumultuous events in the context of history and demonstrates how they set Japan on a path to even greater tragedy. At two minutes to noon on Saturday, September 1, 1923, life in the two cities was humming along at its usual pace. An international merchant fleet, an early harbinger of globalization, floated in Yokohama harbor and loaded tea and silk on the docks. More than three thousand rickshaws worked the streets of the port. Diplomats, sailors, spies, traders, and other expatriates lunched at the Grand Hotel on Yokohama's Bund and prowled the dockside quarter known as Bloodtown. Eighteen miles north, in Tokyo, the young Prince Regent, Hirohito, was meeting in his palace with his advisers, and the noted American anthropologist Frederick Starr was hard at work in his hotel room on a book about Mount Fuji. Then, in a mighty shake of the earth, the world as they knew it ended. When the temblor struck, poorly constructed buildings fell instantly, crushing to death thousands of people or pinning them in the wreckage. Minutes later, a great wall of water washed over coastal resort towns, inundating people without warning. Chemicals exploded, charcoal braziers overturned, neighborhoods of flimsy wooden houses went up in flames. With water mains broken, fire brigades could only look on helplessly as the inferno spread. Joshua Hammer searched diaries, letters, and newspaper accounts and conducted interviews with nonagenarian survivors to piece together a minute-by-minute account of the catastrophe. But the

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