|aSurviving the Japanese onslaught :|ban RAF PoW in Burma : a biography of William Albert Tate W.O. (Ret.) Royal Air Force Bomber Command 1938-1946 /|cWilliam Tate M.A.
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|aSurviving the Japanese onslaught :|ban Royal Air Force prisoner of war in Burma
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|aBiography of William Albert Tate W.O. (Ret.) Royal Air Force Bomber Command 1938-1946
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|aBarnsley, South Yorkshire :|bPen & Sword Aviation, an imprint of Pen & Sword Books Ltd,|cc2016.
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|axi, 152 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates :|billustrations, map, portraits ;|c24 cm
These are the firsthand memoirs of the late William Albert Tate (W.O, RAF Bomber Command) framed within the factual history of his service career in the Royal Air Force between the years 1938 and 1946, penned by his son. This gripping narrative relays William’s firsthand recollections of his time spent as a Japanese Prisoner of War, when he was incarcerated for two years in Rangoon Gaol, after bailing out of his Wellington over Burma. Tales of the harsh brutalities inflicted by his captors and the unsanitary conditions in which he and his fellow captives were held offer a real sense of the everyday realities experienced by Japanese Prisoners of War at this time. Jungle diseases, enforced starvation, sadistic torture tactics and the ever present threat of aerial bombardment all beset these prisoners. William and his son meditate on the legacies of enduring such trials as these in an engaging account of survival against the odds.