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Suez to Singapore (1942)

por Cecil Brown

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A perspective on WWII that is unlike anything I've read due to the focus on what could and could not be reported on during that time. Given the author's personality, not surprising to hear the conflict he had with Paul White later in the decade. I enjoyed the clear distinction established between what the author observed, what the author was told, and what the author was able to report. ( )
  sarcher | Feb 2, 2023 |
The third last part of the book, after Pearl Harbor, weaves in and out of the Dutch East Indies. Check the chapter "The Fighting Dutch."

A painfully honest memoir of an American journalist in WWII. A great pity I found no more books by him on the subject. An excellent portrayal of the "Nero fiddling while Rome burned" scenario that was Singapore. Had he the full backing of his boss at CBS he would have filled more books as Cy Sulzberger did and we would have gained a greater insight into the events during the whole war.

Nevertheless I can understand how this man faded from the front pages after being booted out of Italy by Mussolini, being choked on sand and flies in the Middle East campaign and almost going down with the Repulse. Enough excitement for anyone in a profession that isn't too safe at the front lines. I wish I'd met him at his classes at Cal Poly.

As memorable as Berlin Diary -- and the best journalist's story since that, which is high praise in view of the calibre of the competitors. In some ways more exciting reading, with its spirit of adventure; more challenging, with its realism and fearlessness (it is easy to see why he proved persona non grata to British brass hats); and -- on the whole -- better written. His was a perpetual Jeremiah role; he sought out the facts and battled for the truth -- in time. This is his story in detail -- again proving the old adage, that truth is stranger than fiction. From the struggle of the British in the Near East early in 1941, through the doom of the British in the Pacific:- he saw brave men at their best, and tells their stories superbly; he was on the Repulse when she sank; he told Lieutenant Chapple's undersea thriller to the world; his story of Captain Wheless' great air battle is a hair raiser. He does not hesitate to name names and air facts; he wants to show the reasons behind the events. Essentially a hard- boiled realist, he reveals a softer, human, almost sentimental side. Grand reading -- and with the promised big all-out backing of promotion and advertising, it should go place
  Alhickey1 | Oct 4, 2020 |
Interesting, if occasionally whiny, memoir by a CBS radio correspondent of his experiences in the Middle East, Singapore and Australia in the period from early 1941 to early 1942. Brown got in regular trouble with British authorities and censors, which he goes into at some length; he has scathing opinions on British officialdom in general, which at one point in the book gets him into some mild hot water with Paul White, his boss at CBS News. (Brown would soon leave CBS because of similar disputes.) The highlight of the book is Brown's eyewitness account of the sinking of HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse off the coast of Malaya in the first days of the Pacific phase of the war; Brown had been on HMS Repulse. While there were quite a few survivors (surprisingly many) from the operation, Brown's account is a rare, detailed, first-hand account, one that brought him acclaim. Brown does spend an inordinate amount of time describing (vividly) his repeated bouts of air sickness, and his constant worries about what his CBS bosses think of him (similar themes can be seen in William Shirer's memoirs as well). Bears comparison to Howard K. Smith's "Last Train from Berlin," published around the same time. ( )
  EricCostello | May 2, 2018 |
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As memorable as Berlin Diary -- and the best journalist's story since that, which is high praise in view of the calibre of the competitors. In some ways more exciting reading, with its spirit of adventure; more challenging, with its realism and fearlessness (it is easy to see why he proved persona non grata to British brass hats); and -- on the whole -- better written.
añadido por 2wonderY | editarKirkus Review
 
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