Captured: The Forgotten Men of Guam
By Roger Mansell
Naval Institute Press, November 2012

He had been working on his book for over a decade, delving into the archives and interviewing survivors of some of the most horrific suffering imaginable during World War II. An Army veteran, though not of that war, my dad had dedicated his retirement years to maintaining a massive website of data on the Allied POWs of the Japanese in WWII. This data base and his diligent emails helped several families locate the remains of loved ones and connect ex-POWs with fellow survivors.
When he saw the end of his battle with cancer approaching, my dad asked me to take his manuscript to the post office, to ship it to Pacific War historian Linda Goetz Holmes, the first Pacific War historian appointed to advise the government Interagency Working Group declassifying documents on World War II crimes. As a writer myself with several book published, I had imagined that I would be the one to shepherd his book to publication. But Ms. Holmes, the author of Unjust Enrichment: American POWs Under the Rising Sun, among other works about the POWs, turned out to be the perfect person for the job, and bless her heart that she took it on.
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