Recommendations from our site
“For me this is one of the great works of journalism. I’m not alone in saying this; many others have called it the best piece of journalism in the twentieth century. It describes the stories of six people who were in Hiroshima on the day that the Americans dropped the first atomic bomb, what happened to them, what they remember about those hours, and the repercussions on their lives in subsequent months. It happened in August 1945, and the book came out in 1946, so it’s pretty immediate reporting. Nobody else has done anything like that. I’ve read it again and again.” Read more...
Fred Pearce, Environmentalist
Our most recommended books
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Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland
by Christopher Browning -

Stalingrad
by Antony Beevor -

First Light
by Geoffrey Wellum -

Life and Fate
by Vasily Grossman and translated by Robert Chandler -

Leningrad: The Epic Siege of World War II, 1941-1944
by Anna Reid -

A Woman in Berlin
by Anonymous






