A remarkable account of the terrible climax of the Second
World War in Asia
A Telegraph Book of the Year 2025
'A short but quietly devastating book, in which Overy adds new perspectives
to a subject that has often been approached from a narrowly American angle...
Overy's book is a sombre reminder that the border between civilisation and
savagery is wafer-thin.' - Philip Snow, Literary Review
In the closing months of the Second World War hundreds of thousands of
Japanese, mostly civilians, died in a final outburst of violence from the air.
American planes were beginning to run low on plausible targets when it was
decided to use two atomic weapons in a final, terrible flourish to try to end
the war.
Richard Overy’s remarkable new book rethinks how we should regard this last
stage of the war and the role of the bombing. This book explores the way in
which the willingness to kill civilians and destroy cities became normalized in
the course of a horrific war as moral concerns were blunted and scientists,
airmen, and politicians followed a strategy of mass destruction they would
never have endorsed before the war began. But it also engages with the new
scholarship that shows how complex the effort to end the war was in Japan,
where ‘surrender’ was entirely foreign to Japanese culture.
About the Author
Richard Overy is Honorary Research Professor of
History at the University of Exeter and one of Britain's most distinguished
historians. His major works include The Dictators, winner of
the 2005 Wolfson Prize, The Morbid Age and The Bombing
War, which won a Cundill Award for Historical Excellence in 2014. He
is a Fellow of the British Academy and a Member of the European Academy of
Sciences and Arts.