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Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge continued to suffer from [[Acute radiation syndrome|radiation exposure]]. In 1958, he was named the priest at a much larger church in another part of town. He became a Japanese citizen and changed his named to Father Makoto Takakura. He fell into a coma and died on November 19, 1977. There were always fresh flowers on his grave.
Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge continued to suffer from [[Acute radiation syndrome|radiation exposure]]. In 1958, he was named the priest at a much larger church in another part of town. He became a Japanese citizen and changed his named to Father Makoto Takakura. He fell into a coma and died on November 19, 1977. There were always fresh flowers on his grave.


Tashiko Sasaki was abandoned by her fiancé after being left crippled. Over a 14-month period she underwent orthopedic surgery to improve the condition of her leg. She was quickly noticed for her potential and made a director of the Garden of St. Joseph. She retired in 1978 and was rewarded with a trip to the Holy See. She did volunteer work and spent two years a Mother Superior at Misasa.
Tashiko Sasaki was abandoned by her fiancé after being left crippled. Over a 14-month period she underwent orthopedic surgery to improve the condition of her leg. She was quickly noticed for her potential and made a director of the Garden of St. Joseph. She retired in 1978 and was rewarded with a trip to the Holy See. She did volunteer work and spent two years as Mother Superior at Misasa.


In 1948, Dr. Fujii built a new medical practice in Hiroshima. He has been lucky and faces no long lasting effects of the A-bomb sickness. Dr. Fujii died on January 12, 1973.
In 1948, Dr. Fujii built a new medical practice in Hiroshima. He has been lucky and faces no long lasting effects of the A-bomb sickness. Dr. Fujii died on January 12, 1973.

Revision as of 09:29, 29 December 2013

Hiroshima
1st edition
AuthorJohn Hersey
LanguageEnglish
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherAlfred A. Knopf, Inc.
Publication date
1946
Publication placeJapan
Pages160 pp
ISBN0-679-72103-7
OCLC680840
940.54/25 19
LC ClassD767.25.H6 H4 1989
Preceded byA Bell for Adano (1944) 
Followed byThe Wall (1950) 

Hiroshima is a book by Pulitzer Prize-winning author John Hersey. It tells the stories of six survivors of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, covering a period of time immediately prior to and one year after the atomic bomb was dropped on August 6, 1945. It was originally published in The New Yorker.[1] Although the story was originally scheduled to be published over four issues, the entire August 31, 1946 edition was dedicated to the article.[2][3] The article and subsequent book are regarded as one of the earliest examples of the New Journalism, in which the story-telling techniques of fiction are adapted to non-fiction reporting.

Less than two months after the publication of Hiroshima in The New Yorker, the article was printed as a book by Alfred A. Knopf and has sold over three million copies to date.[1][4] "Hiroshima" has been continuously in print since its publication, according to later New Yorker essayist Roger Angell, because “[i]ts story became a part of our ceaseless thinking about world wars and nuclear holocaust”.[1]

Background

Before writing Hiroshima, Hersey was an infield war correspondent, writing for Life magazine and The New Yorker. He followed troops during the invasion of both Italy and Sicily during World War II.[3] In 1944, Hersey began working in the Pacific Theater and followed Lt. John F. Kennedy through the Solomon Islands.[5] Hersey was one of the first Western journalists to view the disaster that was Hiroshima after the bombing. Hersey was commissioned by William Shawn of The New Yorker to write a series of articles about the effects of a nuclear explosion by utilizing witness accounts as this subject had been virtually untouched by journalists.[5] Hersey had originally interviewed many more witnesses, but he focuses his article on only six of the witnesses.

Publication in The New Yorker

The issue of August 31, 1946, arrived in subscribers' mailboxes bearing a light-hearted cover of a summer picnic in a park. There was no hint what was inside. Hersey's article began where the magazine's regular "Talk of the Town" column usually began, immediately after the theater listings. At the bottom of the page, the editors appended a short note: "TO OUR READERS. The New Yorker this week devotes its entire editorial space to an article on the almost complete obliteration of a city by one atomic bomb, and what happened to the people of that city. It does so in the conviction that few of us have yet comprehended the all but incredible destructive power of this weapon, and that everyone might well take time to consider the terrible implications of its use. The Editors." One of the few people other than the principal editors of The New Yorker tipped to the forthcoming publication was the magazine's principal writer E. B. White, to whom Harold Ross confided his plans. "Hersey has written thirty thousand words on the bombing of Hiroshima (which I can now pronounce in a new and fancy way)", Ross wrote to White in Maine, "one hell of a story, and we are wondering what to do about it.... [William Shawn, managing editor of The New Yorker] wants to wake people up and says we are the people with a chance to do it, and probably the only people that will do it, if it is done."[6]

Literary reception

Hiroshima in ruins, October 1945, two months after the atomic bomb exploded.

Containing a detailed description of the bomb's effects, the article was a publishing sensation. In plain prose, Hersey described the horrifying aftermath of the atomic device: people with melted eyeballs, or people vaporized, leaving only their shadows etched onto walls. The New Yorker article Hiroshima was an immediate best seller and was sold out at newsstands within hours.[3] Many requests for reprints were received by the magazine's offices. The ABC Radio Network preempted regular programming to broadcast readings of the complete text by well-known actors in four half-hour programs.[7] Many radio stations abroad did likewise.[8] The Book of the Month Club rushed a copy of the article into book format, which it sent to members as a free selection.[6]

Published a little more than a year after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the American public was shown a different interpretation of the Japanese that had been in the media previous to this.[9] The Americans could let go of some of the guilt knowing that the Japanese did not blame them for this terrible act of war.[9] After reading Hiroshima a Manhattan Project Scientist wrote that he wept as he remembered how he celebrated the dropping of the atomic bomb.[9] Scientists along with the American public felt shame and guilt at the suffering of the people of Hiroshima.[9] As voiced by witnesses in Hiroshima, the people of Hiroshima did not blame the Americans for the infliction but instead their own government.[4][10] Many Japanese believe that the dropping of the atomic bomb saved Japan and it was widely thought that the Japanese Government would have destroyed the entire country before losing the war.[9]

The 31,000 word article was published later the same year by Alfred A. Knopf as a book,[11] Hersey's work is often cited as one of the earliest examples of New Journalism in its melding of elements of non-fiction reportage with the pace and devices of the novel. Hersey's plain prose was praised by critics as a model of understated narrative. Hershey rarely gave interviews and abhorred going on anything resembling book tours, as his longtime editor Judith Jones recalled. "If ever there was a subject calculated to make a writer overwrought and a piece overwritten, it was the bombing of Hiroshima", wrote Hendrik Hertzberg, "yet Hersey's reporting was so meticulous, his sentences and paragraphs were so clear, calm and restrained, that the horror of the story he had to tell came through all the more chillingly."[12]

The author said he adopted the plain style to suit the story he strove to tell. "The flat style was deliberate", Hersey said 40 years later, "and I still think I was right to adopt it. A high literary manner, or a show of passion, would have brought me into the story as a mediator. I wanted to avoid such mediation, so the reader's experience would be as direct as possible."[6]

The founder of The New Yorker Harold Ross told his friend, author Irwin Shaw: "I don't think I've ever got as much satisfaction out of anything else in my life." But The New Yorker's publication of Hersey's article caused trouble with respect to Hersey's relationship with Henry Luce, the co-founder of Time-Life and Hersey's first mentor, who felt Hersey should have reported the event for one of Luce's magazines instead.Despite Luce's misgivings about Hersey's choice of The New Yorker to print the Hiroshima story, the magazine's format and style allowed the author much more freedom in reporting and writing. The Luce publications – Time, Life and Fortune – had nothing similar. Moreover, The New Yorker went to unprecedented lengths to keep the Hersey story secret. The weekly magazine's top editors observed complete secrecy about the printing of the article. While editors Harold Ross and William Shawn spent long hours editing and deliberating every sentence, the magazine's staff was not told anything about the forthcoming issue. Staffers were baffled when the normal weekly proofs were not returned, and their inquiries were not answered. Even the advertisement department was deliberately not informed.[6]

Time magazine said about Hiroshima:

“Every American who has permitted himself to make jokes about atom bombs, or who has come to regard them as just one sensational phenomenon that can now be accepted as part of civilization, like the airplane and the gasoline engine, or who has allowed himself to speculate as to what we might do with them if we were forced into another war, ought to read Mr. Hersey. When this magazine article appears in book form the critics will say that it is in its fashion a classic. But it is rather more than that”.[9]

The magazine later termed Hersey's account of the bombing "the most celebrated piece of journalism to come out of World War II."[13]

It was also met with approval by The New Republic which said “Hersey's piece is certainly one of the great classics of the war”.[14] While the majority of the excerpts praised the article, Mary McCarthy said that “to have done the atomic bomb justice, Mr. Hersey would have had to interview the dead”.[15] It was quickly a book in the Book-of-the-Month Club and distributed for free because of its impact on the humanity of the human race.[16] Hiroshima was also read word for word on the radio by the American Broadcasting Company, amplifying its effects.[2][17]

Unavailable in Japan

At the same time, Hiroshima was banned from Japan by the US Government, which controlled the country.[18] It was discussed around the table and excerpts were seen in other papers where it was either applauded or met with disdain.

Outline

The article begins on the morning of August 6, 1945, the day the atomic bomb was dropped, killing an estimated 135,000 people.[19] The book begins with the following sentence.

At exactly fifteen minutes past eight in the morning on August 6, 1945, Japanese time, at the moment when the atomic bomb flashed above Hiroshima, Miss Toshiko Sasaki, a clerk in the personnel department of the East Asia Tin Works, had just sat down at her place in the plant office and was turning her head to speak to the girl at the next desk.

Hersey introduces the six characters: two doctors, a Protestant minister, a widowed seamstress, a young female factory worker and a German Catholic priest.[20] It describes their mornings before the bomb was dropped. Through the book, the lives of these six people overlap as they share similar experiences. Each chapter covers a time period from the morning of the bombing to 40 years after the bombing for each witness.

The six characters are:

Reverend Mr. Kiyoshi Tanimoto

Tanimoto was 3,500 yards from center. He was pastor at Hiroshima Methodist Church, a small man in stature, “quick to talk, laugh and cry”, weak yet fiery, cautious and thoughtful, educated in theology at Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA, speaks excellent English, obsessed with being spied on, Chairman of Neighborhood Association.[4]

Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura

Nakamura was 1,350 yards from explosion center. She is a widow of a tailor who is raising her three children (10 year old boy Toshio, eight year old girl Yaeko, and five year old girl Myeko), husband recently died in Singapore in the war effort.

Dr. Masakazu Fujii

Fujii was 1,550 yards from explosion center. He is described as hedonistic, owns private hospital that contains 30 rooms for patients with modern equipment, family living in Osaka and Kyushu, convivial and calm.

Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge (Makoto Takakura)

Kleinsorge was 1,400 yards from explosion center. Kleinsorge was 38 years old at the time, a German priest of the Society of Jesus, weakened by wartime diet, feels unaccepted by the Japanese people, “thin face, with a prominent Adam’s apple, a hollow chest, dangling hands, big feet.”[4]

Dr. Terufumi Sasaki

Sasaki was 1,650 yards from the center of the explosion. He was 25 years old, a young surgeon at the Red Cross Hospital. He lived with his mother in Mukaihara, an idealist, upset with poor health services and practiced medicine in communities with poor health care without a permit, not related to Miss Toshiko Sasaki.

Miss Toshinki Sasaki (Sister Dominique Sasaki)

Sasaki was 1,600 yards from the center of the explosion. She was 20 years old and engaged to soldier who was a “clerk in the personal department of the East Asia Tin Works”[4]

"A Noiseless Flash"

This chapter introduces the characters and details the witnesses’ accounts of the morning before and their perception of the explosion of the atomic bomb. The explosion occurred at exactly 8:15am, local time. Miss Toshiko is at her desk and talking to a fellow employee at the Tin factory when the room filled with “ a blinding light”.[4] Miss Toshiko went unconscious. She was covered with a bookshelf while the building collapsed around her. While sitting on his porch, Dr. Masakuza Fujii witnessed a “brilliant yellow” flash and toppled into the river.[4] He injured his shoulder severely. After returning to her home from a safe area, Mrs. Nakamura saw a flash “whiter than any white she had” seen before.[4] She was thrown into the next room while her children were buried in debris. While reading his morning paper, Father Wilhem Kleinsorge witnesses a “terrible flash…[like] a large meteor colliding with the earth”.[4] He found himself in the vegetable garden of the missionary with only small cuts. Standing alone in a corridor, Dr. Tereufumi Sasaki saw a “gigantic photographic flash”.[4] The explosion ripped the hospital apart but Dr. Sasaki remained untouched except his glasses were removed from his face. Dr. Sasaki was now the only doctor to be unhurt in the hospital and the hospital was quickly filled with patients. Reverend Kiyoshi Tanimoto saw a “tremendous flash of light cut across the sky”.[4] Tanimoto threw himself against a wall of his home and felt pressure, splinters, and debris falls on him.

"The Fire"

Chapter 2 documents the time immediately after the explosion where the fires are spreading and the witnesses are trying to save others and find safety for themselves. Immediately after the explosion, Reverend Tanimoto ran in search of his family and parishioners. He puts aside the search for his family when he comes across people in need of help and then resumes the search for his family. Mrs. Nakamura travels with her children and neighbor to Asano Park at the Jesuit mission house. Mrs. Nakamura and her children are continuously vomiting. Father Kleinsorge is found wondering the mission grounds with numerous pieces of glass in his back. Father Kleinsorge ran into his room and grabbed a first aid kit and his suitcase containing money and paperwork of the mission. Father Kleinsorge and others go out and bring food back for everyone at Asano Park.

Dr. Fujii’s hospital was in the nearby river while he was trapped between its beams, unable to move. Dr. Fujii looks at the cities and calls it “an endless parade of misery”.[4] Dr. Sasaki “worked without method” in deciding which patient would receive care next.[4] Patients filled every inch of the hospital. People were throwing up everywhere. He became like a robot, repeating treatment on patient after patient. Miss Sasaki still lays unconscious under the bookshelf and crumbled building. Her leg is only severely broken. She is propped up alongside two badly wounded people and left. Father Kleinsorge sets off for Asano Park. Mr. Tanimoto has crossed town to find his family and parishioners. He apologizes to the wounded as he passes by for not being injured. Only out of luck does he run into his wife and child in Ushida. They split up so that she may go find her family and he may take care of the church.

"Details are Being Investigated"

Chapter three chronicles the days after the explosion, the continuing troubles faced by the survivors and the possible explanations for the massive devastation that the witnesses come across. On August 12, the Nakamuras continued to be sick and discovered the rest of their family had perished. Mr. Tanimoto continues to ferry people from one side of the river to the other in hopes to bring them to safety from the fires. Father Kleinsorge, weakened by his injuries and previous illness, remains in the Park. He is finally welcomed by the Japanese and no longer feels like a foreigner. Dr. Fujii sleeps on the floor of his destroyed family’s home. His left clavicle is broken and is covered in many deep cuts. Ten thousand wounded have shown up at the Red Cross Hospital. Dr. Sasaki is still trying to attend to as many people as possible. All that can be done is to put saline on the worst burns. Dead patients were lying everywhere. Miss Sasaki is still left with no help outside the factory. Finally friends come to locate her body and she is transferred to a hospital. -At the end of the chapter, on August 15, the war is over .

"Panic Grass and Feverfew"

It has been twelve days since the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. Four square miles of the city had been completely destroyed. Since the bombing, Hiroshima has been flooded which continued chaos and destruction. Many people are now developing radiation sickness and a hatred for the Americans has been festering but decreased once Hiroshima was designated safe radiation levels. Father Kleinsorge’s wounds were examined and found to have reopened and become inflamed. Even into September, Father Kleinsorge is getting worse. He was taken to the hospital for a high fever, anemia and low leukocyte levels. Mrs. Nakamura still felt nauseated and her hair began to fall out. Once given the okay that the radiation levels in Hiroshima where acceptable and her appearance was presentable, she returned to her home to retrieve her sewing machine but it was rusted and ruined. Mr. Tanimoto also fell ill without any notice. His fever reached 104 degrees Fahrenheit and was given Vitamin B1 injections to combat the radiation disease. Miss Sasaki remains hospitalized and in pain. The infection has prevented doctors from being able to set her fractured leg. She was discharged from the hospital at the end of April but was severely crippled. Dr. Fujii is still living in a friend’s summer home and his injuries have progressed well. He has been noting that many survivors are continuing to experience strange problems. He bought a new clinic in a Hiroshima suburb and once healed began a successful practice. Dr. Sasaki has been studying the progression of patients and developed three stages of the disease. After six months, the Red Cross Hospital began to function normally. He remained the only surgeon on staff but finally had time to get married in March.

One year after the bombing, Miss Sasaki was a cripple; Mrs. Nakamura was destitute; Father Kleinsorge was back in the hospital; Dr. Sasaki was not capable of the work he had once done; Dr. Fujii had lost the thirty-room hospital it took him many years to acquire, and no prospects of rebuilding it; Mr. Tanimoto’s church had been ruined and he no longer had his exceptional vitality.”.[4]

"The Aftermath"

This chapter was added forty years after the initial publication in The New Yorker.[1]: p66  It appeared in the July 15, 1985 issue of the The New Yorker.[5] Hersey returned to Hiroshima to learn what has become of the six survivors. His record of what he found became chapter 5 in subsequent editions of the book.[3] The survivors of the Hiroshima bombing are now referred to as hibakusha (explosion-affected people). The Japanese initially refused to take any responsibility for the American atomic bombing or the population affected. The victims were discriminated against, and many employers refused to hire a hibakusha because they could not work as hard. Their exposure, called "A-bomb sickness" in Japan, left them with chronic weakness, dizziness and digestive issues, among others. In 1954, the Lucky Dragon No. 5 contamination incident created a political movement for the hibakusha and created the A-bomb Victims Medical Care Law. This law allowed for medical attention for the hibakusha and a monthly allowance for them.

For a time, Mrs. Nakamura made only enough income to get by and feed her family. She fell ill and could no longer work. To receive treatment, she was forced to sell her sewing machine. She worked odd jobs like delivering bread where she could take three or four days off to recover before working again. She continued to earn just enough to survive. She worked at the mothball factory for 13 years but did not immediately sign up for her health allowance through the A-bomb Victims Medical Care Law. She was invited to be a member of the Bereaved Family Association and traveled the world.

Dr. Terufumi Sasaki, who suffered no side effects from the bombing, was haunted by the images of the Red Cross Hospital after the bombing. In 1951, Dr. Sasaki quit working at the Red Cross Hospital. He started his own practice in his hometown and normally performed simple surgeries. He decided to build a geriatric hospital. He continued to regret not keeping better track of all the cremated bodies at the hospital.

Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge continued to suffer from radiation exposure. In 1958, he was named the priest at a much larger church in another part of town. He became a Japanese citizen and changed his named to Father Makoto Takakura. He fell into a coma and died on November 19, 1977. There were always fresh flowers on his grave.

Tashiko Sasaki was abandoned by her fiancé after being left crippled. Over a 14-month period she underwent orthopedic surgery to improve the condition of her leg. She was quickly noticed for her potential and made a director of the Garden of St. Joseph. She retired in 1978 and was rewarded with a trip to the Holy See. She did volunteer work and spent two years as Mother Superior at Misasa.

In 1948, Dr. Fujii built a new medical practice in Hiroshima. He has been lucky and faces no long lasting effects of the A-bomb sickness. Dr. Fujii died on January 12, 1973.

Kiyoshi Tanimoto continued to preach the gospel to the people rebuilding in Hiroshima. He was brought to the United States by the Methodist Board of Missions to raise money for his church. On March 5, 1949, his memorandum, Hiroshima Ideas, was published. In 1950, he returned to America for his second speaking tour. On this trip, he spoke to members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Because of his world-wide tours, he was nicknamed "The A-bomb minister". In 1955, he returned to America with more Hiroshima Maidens. During this trip, he appeared on “This is Your Life” with Ralph Edwards. He is surprised to meet Captain Robert Lewis, the pilot of the Enola Gay.

John Hersey

Lasting impact

As can be expected, the publication of this article placed Hiroshima and the atomic bomb at the heart of the nuclear war debate. In Hiroshima in History and Memory by Hogan, the beliefs that Hiroshima created a realization of the magnitude of the event and an entrance into the analysis of the event.[21] It put forward three issues that before had not been faced: the force of modern science, the bomb and the future of nuclear weapons.[21]

The events of the dropping of the atomic bomb live in the psyche of everyone and were brought to gruesome light by Hersey.[21] “Hiroshima’ has and will continue to be “part of our ceaseless thinking about world wars and nuclear holocaust”.[22] The effects of the radiation sickness have continued to be a concern for the world and the safety of nuclear power.[23] These concerns have resurfaced since the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor incident.[23] The images brought to the public after the publishing of Hiroshima were revived in the world’s eyes [23][24]

The grotesque images depicted in Hiroshima led the way for a new wave of science fiction literature. A wave of “future-war” stories such as Flash Gordon are “narrated from the point of view of an everyman" who witnesses the invasion of his country first hand.[2] As the narrators struggle to survive, we get to witness the horror of the attack through their eyes, and come to loathe the enemy aliens that have so cruelly and unjustly invaded their country”.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Angell, Roger (July 31, 1995). "From the Archives, "Hersey and History"". The New Yorker. p. 66.
  2. ^ a b c d Sharp (2000). "From Yellow Peril to Japanese Wasteland: John Hersey's "Hiroshima"". 46. Twentieth Century Literature: 434–452. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ a b c d Michaub, Jon (June 8, 2010). "Eighty-Five From The Archive: John Hersey". The New Yorker.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Hersey, John (1989). "Hiroshima". New York: Random House.
  5. ^ a b c Jon Michaub, "EIGHTY-FIVE FROM THE ARCHIVE: JOHN HERSEY", The New Yorker, June 8, 2010, np.
  6. ^ a b c d Rothman, Steve. "The Publication of "Hiroshima" in the New Yorker".
  7. ^ The ABC Radio Network presented readings of the text by well-known actors, whose names were not released in advance, said the network, "in order to focus maximum listener attention on Mr. Hersey's words". The programs were so well-received that they won the George Foster Peabody Award for the Outstanding Educational Program of 1946.
  8. ^ Hersey's entire text was also broadcast by the BBC in England, as well as by national radio networks in Canada and Australia.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Gerard J. DeGroot, The bomb: a life. Massachusetts: Harvard Press, 2005.
  10. ^ Richard Minear, Hiroshima (New Jersey: Princeton Press, 1990), 7.
  11. ^ The Time of Their Lives: The Golden Age of Great American Book Publishers, Their Editors and Authors, By Al Silverman, Published by Macmillan, 2008, ISBN 0-312-35003-1.
  12. ^ "Obituary of John Hersey, The New Yorker, April 5, 1993".
  13. ^ Awakening a Sleeping Giant the Call, R. Z. Sheppard, TIME magazine, May 6, 1985
  14. ^ Leonard Ray Teel, The Public Press, 1900-1954: the history of American Journalism (Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing, 2006), 228.
  15. ^ Richard Minear, Hiroshima (New Jersey: Princeton Press, 1990), 7
  16. ^ Leonard Ray Teel, The Public Press, 1900-1954: the history of American Journalism (Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing, 2006), 228.
  17. ^ Michael J. Hogan, Hiroshima in History and Memory (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 149-152.
  18. ^ Ian Buruma, “Expect to Be Lied to in Japan”, The New York Review of Books, November 8, 2012. np.
  19. ^ "WW2 People's War".
  20. ^ Simkin, John (September 1997). "John Hersey". Spartacus International. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
  21. ^ a b c Harvey J.Langholtz, Psychology of Peace Keeping (Westport: Praeger Publishers, 1988), 86.
  22. ^ Roger Angell, From the Archives, “HERSEY AND HISTORY,” The New Yorker, July 31, 1995, p. 66.
  23. ^ a b c Eben Harrell, “Thoughts on Fukushima and Hiroshima,” The New Yorker, March 22, 2011.
  24. ^ Matthew Jones, After Hiroshima: The United States, Race and Nuclear Weapons in Asia, 1945-1965 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010) 23-25

Further reading