
‘The Hiroshima Men' is a reminder of the horrific human costs of atomic attack
book review
By ANITA SNOW
John Hersey was a 32-year-old reporter who returned from Japan with in 1946 with a groundbreaking story that challenged the U.S. government's version of its atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima, showing the human consequences were far more horrific and extensive than the American public had been told.
Hersey's 30,000-word piece for The New Yorker magazine focused on a few of the thousands of survivors who fell ill, and often died, from the lingering effects of radiation long after the bomb's initial impact killed tens of thousands of Japanese men, women and children.
Hersey is among diverse group of men author and historian Iain MacGregor profiles in his new book, 'The Hiroshima Men: The Quest to Build the Atomic Bomb, and the Fateful Decision to Use It.' MacGregor earlier wrote 'Checkpoint Charlie,' an acclaimed history of Cold War Berlin, as well as 'The Lighthouse of Stalingrad: The Hidden Truth at the Heart of the Greatest Battle of World War II.'
With the 80th anniversary of the Hiroshima attack approaching next month, 'The Hiroshima Men' is a potent reminder of the extreme human costs that were wrought by the first atomic weapon employed during warfare.
By profiling some key players, MacGregor pulls readers into their personal stories with visually enticing description and lively dialogue.
One was pilot Paul Tibbetts, Jr., who fell in love with flying at age 12 when he rode in an old biplane that took off from a horse racing track outside Miami. He named the Boeing B-29 Superfortress that he was flying when it dropped the atomic bomb on Aug. 6, 1945, for his mother, Enola Gay.
Another profile is of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the brilliant scientific theorist who inspired a team testing the atomic bomb at a secret research laboratory in rural New Mexico.
There's also Maj. Gen. Henry 'Hap' Arnold, who led the U.S. Army Air Corps in World War II and understood what could be achieved with the faster long-range B-29 bomber, which could travel farther and fly much higher than the popular B-17 that had been used on Europe.
MacGregor also introduces us to Senkichi Awaya, the mayor of Hiroshima, a city founded in the late 1580s by a powerful warlord who built a castle headquarters on the shores of a strategically located bay.
There are many more.
The most powerful sections of the book come toward the end, when MacGregor describes the ghastly aftermath of the bombing — a gruesome hellscape littered with charred bodies and stunned survivors with skin dangling from their bodies and eyes hanging from the sockets.
He then invites readers to reflect on the event's profound costs:
'I hope, looking right across the experience of this terrifying and cataclysmic event, that you, the reader, can judge for yourself whether this journey through the experiences of a city mayor, a bomber pilot, an Army general and an award-winning journalist, who all were intimately connected to Hiroshima, was worth it.'
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Yomiuri Shimbun
4 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Nagasaki A-Bomb Survivor Urges N-Arms Never Be Used; 93-Year-Old Tells of Gruesome Scenes Witnessed at 13
Nagasaki atomic bomb survivor Hiroshi Nishioka, 93, read out the 'Pledge for Peace' at the peace memorial ceremony as a representative of survivors in Nagasaki City on Saturday. Nishioka, the oldest person ever to serve as the representative, devoted most of his speech to his own experience of the atomic bombing and appealed for nuclear weapons never to be used. Ahead of the ceremony, he had said: 'There are very few people left who know what the atomic bombing was like. So I would like to talk about what I know as much as I can.' On August 9, 1945, Nishioka, then 13 years old, was in the medical supply room of a middle school in Nagasaki, about 3.3 kilometers from the hypocenter. The echoing roar of an American B-29 bomber drew him to the window, where he was enveloped in a light that seemed to blend orange and yellow. 'I thought, 'A bomb has been dropped on the school's tennis court,'' Nishioka said in his speech. 'I lay flat on the floor.' He was struck by the blast wave, and classmates who had fallen on top of him were drenched in blood as their flesh was pierced with numerous shards of glass from the shattered windows. On the way home, he saw evacuees streaming away from the area where the center of the blast had been. 'A man with his entire body covered in blood. A mother holding a baby as she walked, with blood streaming from the baby's face. A person whose arm, hanging limply, appeared to be severed.' Facing countless injured people, Nishioka recalled that 'my senses became numb, and I did not even feel pity for them.' The next day, he joined the rescue activities at another middle school, closer to the hypocenter. The uniformed bodies of many students who had been crushed under the school building were laid out on the sports ground along with the bodies of teachers who also died in the bombing. On his way back, he saw many bodies scattered on the road. An injured person begged him for water. 'I might die myself,' the young Nishioka thought. Afraid that the water bottle hanging from his waist might be taken, he had no choice but to shake off the person's arms, which were stretched out for help, and move on. 'Even now, when I recall the moment, my heart still aches.' He left Nagasaki and moved to Tokyo to attend university. He got a job at a major trading company, and worked on trade with the United States, among others. When he retired about 30 years ago, an acquaintance who is also a hibakusha atomic bomb survivor urged him to speak up, saying, 'Anybody who was in Nagasaki [at that time] needs to tell the world.' He visited the United States and spoke in English about the damage caused by the atomic bomb. Seeing how intensely the audience listened to his testimony, he realized the importance of sharing his story. He began his activities as a storyteller for the atomic bomb survivors' association in Kanagawa Prefecture and has continued to give lectures on the atomic bombings at schools. At the same time, he was also feeling powerless due to the idea that a single voice would not make nuclear threat disappear. However, when Nihon Hidankyo (Japan Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Sufferers Organizations), to which his association belongs, was awarded with the Nobel Peace Prize last year, he felt encouraged to keep going. On Saturday, he said in his speech: 'We should never stop the movement that leads toward peace. We should keep moving forward, and have more people join us. This is what we are aiming for.' Nishioka collaborated with a Kanagawa prefectural government project that utilizes AI in storytelling activities, pre-recording testimony plus answers to anticipated questions. These materials are already used in school education, and he feels they are effective tools in anticipation of an era when there are no longer any living atomic bomb survivors. At the ceremony on Saturday, ambassadors from countries that possess nuclear arms, including the United States and Russia, were listening to Nishioka's words. Amid the deteriorating international situation surrounding nuclear weapons, he concluded his speech with the following words. 'Nuclear weapons should never be used. Everything will be over if they are used. Let us protect this beautiful Earth.'


The Mainichi
7 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Nagasaki marks 80th A-bomb anniv. as survivors put hopes of nuke ban in hands of youth
NAGASAKI, Japan (AP) -- The southern Japanese city of Nagasaki on Saturday marked 80 years since the U.S. atomic attack that killed tens of thousands and left survivors who hope their harrowing memories can help make their hometown the last place on Earth to be hit by a nuclear bomb. The United States launched the Nagasaki attack on Aug. 9, 1945, killing 70,000 by the end of that year, three days after the bombing of Hiroshima that killed 140,000. Japan surrendered on Aug. 15, 1945, ending World War II and the country's nearly half-century of aggression across Asia. About 2,600 people, including representatives from more than 90 countries, attended a memorial event at Nagasaki Peace Park, where Mayor Shiro Suzuki and Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba spoke, among other guests. At 11:02 a.m., the exact time when the plutonium bomb exploded above Nagasaki, participants observed a moment of silence as a bell rang. Nagasaki pledges to be the last atomic bombing site Dozens of doves, a symbol of peace, were released after a speech by Suzuki, whose parents are survivors of the attack. He said the city's memories of the bombing are "a common heritage and should be passed down for generations" in and outside Japan. "The existential crisis of humanity has become imminent to each and every one of us living on Earth," Suzuki said. "In order to make Nagasaki the last atomic bombing site now and forever, we will go hand-in-hand with global citizens and devote our utmost efforts toward the abolition of nuclear weapons and the realization of everlasting world peace." Praying for nuclear abolition and no war Survivors and their families gathered Saturday in rainy weather at Peace Park and nearby Hypocenter Park, located below the bomb's exact detonation spot, hours before the official ceremony. "I simply seek a world without war," said Koichi Kawano, an 85-year-old survivor who laid flowers at the Hypocenter monument decorated with colorful paper cranes and other offerings. Some others prayed at churches in Nagasaki, home to Catholic converts who went deep underground during centuries of violent persecution in Japan's feudal era. The twin bells at Urakami Cathedral, which was destroyed in the bombing, also rang together again after one of the bells that had gone missing following the attack was restored by volunteers. Despite their pain from wounds, discrimination and illnesses from radiation, survivors have publicly committed to a shared goal of abolishing nuclear weapons. But they worry about the world moving in the opposite direction. Survivors put their hopes in younger hands Aging survivors and their supporters in Nagasaki now put their hopes of achieving nuclear weapons abolition in the hands of younger people, telling them the attack is not distant history, but an issue that remains relevant to their future. "There are only two things I long for: the abolition of nuclear weapons and prohibition of war," survivor Fumi Takeshita said. "I only see a world where nuclear weapons are never used and everyone can live in peace." In hopes of passing on the lessons of history, Takeshita visits schools to share her experience with children. "When you grow up and remember what you learned today, please think what each of you can do to prevent war," Takeshita, 83, told students during a school visit earlier this week. Teruko Yokoyama, an 83-year-old member of a Nagasaki organization supporting survivors, said she feels the absence of those she has worked, which fuels her strong desire to document the lives of remaining survivors. The number of survivors has fallen to 99,130, about a quarter of the original number, with their average age exceeding 86. Survivors worry about fading memories, as the youngest of the survivors were too young to recall the attack clearly. "We must keep records of the atomic bombing damages of the survivors and thier lifetime story," said Yokoyama, whose two sisters died after suffering illnesses linked to radiation. Her organization has started to digitalize the narratives of survivors for viewing on YouTube and other social media platforms with the help of a new generation. "There are younger people who are beginning to take action," Yokoyama told The Associated Press on Friday. "So I think we don't have to get depressed yet." Nagasaki hosted a "peace forum" on Friday where survivors shared their stories with more than 300 young people from around the country. Seiichiro Mise, a 90-year-old survivor, said he is handing seeds of "flowers of peace" to the younger generation in hopes of seeing them bloom. Japan's security dilemma Survivors are frustrated by a growing nuclear threat and support among international leaders for developing or possessing nuclear weapons for deterrence. They criticize the Japanese government's refusal to sign or even participate in the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons because Japan, as an American ally, needs U.S. nuclear possession as deterrence. In Ishiba's speech, the prime mininister reiterated Japan's pursuit of a nuclear-free world and pledged to promote dialogue and cooperation between countries with nuclear weapons and non-nuclear states at the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons review conference scheduled for April and May 2026 in New York City. Ishiba, however, did not mention the nuclear weapons ban treaty. Nagasaki invited representatives from all countries to attend the ceremony Saturday. China notably notified the city it would not be present without providing a reason. The ceremony last year stirred controversy due to the absence of the U.S. ambassador and other Western envoys in response to the Japanese city's refusal to invite Israel.

a day ago
80 Years On: Hiroshima Museum Continues to Receive A-Bomb Artifacts
News from Japan Society Aug 8, 2025 16:00 (JST) Hiroshima, Aug. 8 (Jiji Press)--The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum continues to receive a steady stream of atomic bombing-related donations, with about 50 artifacts contributed each year by families and survivors seeking to preserve memories of the August 1945 blast. Donors often share their personal motivations when presenting such items to the museum. "I want to leave proof that the deceased once surely lived," explained one contributor, while another expressed hopes that the donations will serve "for the shared memory of humanity." Museum staff carefully document these stories alongside each artifact, incorporating both the items and their histories into exhibitions and related programs. As Japan marks the 80th anniversary of World War II's end this year, the urgency of preserving such testimonies has intensified. With each passing year, fewer hibakusha atomic bomb survivors remain to share their firsthand accounts. The donated materials are therefore increasingly vital for communicating both the devastating impact of the bombing and the human stories of those who lived through it. In June, 66-year-old Hiroshima resident Yo Hosokawa contributed to the museum about 40 items that belonged to his aunt, including a personal diary. His aunt was just 13 years old when she perished in the atomic bombing. [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press