
In Ship of Ghosts, The Story of the USS Houston, FDR’s Legendary Lost Cruiser and the Epic Saga of Her Survivors, James Hornfischer details the history of the USS Houston and its sailors, from launch through those fierce battles in the early days of World War II. The story is hardly over when the ship goes down.The survivors are interned as POW’s by the Japanese, whose Bushido code relegates prisoners to less than human beings. Those who survived the fiery holocaust of battle, must now strive to endure almost four years of living hell. Joined by other Allied POWs, they were forced to become slave laborers for the Emperor and endure the worst kind of hardships imaginable. Tragically this including being bombed by Allied planes while constructing the Burma Railroad and being torpedoed by US submarines while being transported like cattle in the hulls of unmarked Japanese merchant ships. Hornfischer has the ability to convey history in vivid detail like few others. Some of the things he relates in this book were just so gut-wrneching that I had to set it down and walk away for a while. Don’t get me wrong, this book is a real page-turner, but the story of the USS Houston survivors has more than it’s fair share of grim moments.
I’ve now read all three of Hornfischer’s books and am convinced that he is on track to become one the best Naval history writers of modern times. Hopefully there is more to come!
Up next:
Helmet for my Pillow: From Parris Island to the Pacific by Robert Leckie
