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020 _a0871130726
040 _aUA-OsUOA
_bukr
_cUA-OsUOA
_dUA-OsUOA
041 _aeng
080 _a821.111(410)
090 _a821.111(410)
_bB77
100 _aBooth M.
_918858
245 _aHiroshima Joe
_cMartin Booth
250 _aFirst Edition
260 _aBoston
_aNew York
_bThe Atlantic Monthly Press
_c1985
300 _a441 p.
520 _aCaptured by Hirohito's soldiers at the fall of Hong Kong and transferred to a Japanese slave camp outside Hiroshima, Captain Joe Sandingham was present when the bomb was dropped. Now a shell of a man, he lives in a cheap Hong Kong hotel, scrounging for food and the occasional bar girl. The locals call him "Hiroshima Joe" with a mixture of pity and contempt. But Joe—haunted by the sounds and voices of his past, debilitated by illness, and shattered by his wartime ordeal—is a man whose compassion and will to survive define a clear-eyed and unexpected heroism. One of the most powerful novels about the experience of war, first published in 1985.
650 _a821 Художня література окремими мовами і мовними сім'ями
942 _cBK
_2udc
955 _a3
999 _c279212
_d279212