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4+ Works 1,133 Members 12 Reviews

About the Author

Richard B. Frank is an internationally acclaimed historian of the Asia-Pacific War, and the author of Guadalcanal and Downfall He is a member of the Board of Presidential Counselors of the National WWII Museum.
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Series

Works by Richard B. Frank

Associated Works

What If? 2: Eminent Historians Imagine What Might Have Been (2001) — Contributor — 1,047 copies, 11 reviews
MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History — Autumn 2015 (2015) — Author "Why Japan agreed to Unconditional Surrender" — 2 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

Read this during my flight from Helsinki to Shanghai and subsequent COVID-19 quarantine in Shanghai.
 
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nitrolpost | 3 other reviews | Mar 19, 2024 |
Bought this book for my GCMH project on Guadalcanal Logistics since the Naval War College Library does not have it on their shelves. Very helpful in my research and the author provided very useful conclusions at the end as well. He did a great job researching both sides and gave me considerable insight on Japanese logistics as well.
 
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SDWets | 3 other reviews | Nov 6, 2023 |
Good narrative of early pacific war. Good for me in that it focused on less familiar (non-American) parts of the early war - Singapore, Burma, Indonesia. Excellent overview of Pearl Harbor.
 
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apende | 3 other reviews | Jul 12, 2022 |
The particular value of this trilogy is that, over the last 10-15 years, the historical understanding of Chiang Kai-shek's war with Japan has been brought into much finer focus, and the result is that one is left with a more favorable image of Chiang. Not to mention that the government of the PRC has come to lean heavily on China's participation in World War II as a validation of Beijing's international legitimacy. These are realities that Frank is seeking to bring to a more general readership. Having fairly recently read some of the academic history that Frank leans upon in writing this work, you can argue that I'm not the main audience. But what I appreciate about Frank, thinking back to some of his earlier works, is that he does a particularly good job of putting the contingency back into controversial events, when 20/20 hindsight tends to warp the perception of how period decision makers came to make the choices they did. I look forward to the coming books in this trilogy with considerable enthusiasm.… (more)
 
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Shrike58 | 3 other reviews | Jul 22, 2021 |

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Works
4
Also by
2
Members
1,133
Popularity
#22,652
Rating
3.9
Reviews
12
ISBNs
18

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