Most Honorable Son: A Forgotten Hero’s Fight Against Fascism and Hate During World War II
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Author | Gregg Jones |
Ben Kuroki was a twenty-four-year-old Japanese American farm boy whose heritage was never a problem in remote Nebraska—until Pearl Harbor. Among the millions of Americans who flocked to military stations to enlist, Ben wanted to avenge the attack, reclaim his family honor, and prove his patriotism. But as anti-Japanese sentiment soared, Ben had to fight to be allowed to fight for America. And fight he did.
As a gunner on Army Air Corps bombers, Ben flew fifty-eight missions spanning three combat Europe, North America, and the Pacific, including the climactic B-29 firebombing campaign against Japan that culminated with the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He flew some of the war’s boldest and bloodiest air missions and lived to tell about it. In between his tours in Europe and the Pacific, he challenged FDR’s shameful incarceration of more than one hundred thousand people of Japanese ancestry in America, and he would be credited by some with setting in motion the debate that reversed a grave national dishonor. In the euphoric wake of America’s victory, the decorated war hero used his national platform to carry out what he called his “fifty-ninth mission,” urging his fellow Americans to do more to eliminate bigotry and racism at home.
Told in full for the first time, and long overdue, Ben’s extraordinary story is a quintessentially American one of patriotism, principal, perseverance, and courage. It’s about being in the vanguard of history, the bonding of a band of brothers united in a just cause, a timeless and unflinching account of racial bigotry, and of one man’s transcendent sense of belonging—in war, in peace, abroad, and at home.
Pulitzer Prize-finalist foreign correspondent and investigative journalist Gregg Jones is the author of three acclaimed nonfiction books: 'Honor in the Dust: Theodore Roosevelt, War in the Philippines, and The Rise and Fall of America's Imperial Dream', an Editors' Choice of the New York Times Book Review; 'Last Stand at Khe Sanh,' winner of the Marine Corps Heritage Foundation's Gen. Wallace M. Greene Jr. Award for distinguished nonfiction; and 'Red Revolution.' Jones reported on the fall of the Taliban and the beginning of the U.S. war in Afghanistan in 2001-2002, and has covered civil wars, insurgencies, revolutions and other major news events on five continents. He has worked as a staff writer at the Los Angeles Times and Dallas Morning News, and has also written for the Washington Post, Boston Globe and The Guardian.”