Overview
Much like Midnight in Peking, this must-read gives a true insight of the terror experienced as Asia bore witness to the world’s very first blitz
Saturday, August 14, 1937—that summer Shanghai was expecting to be hit by a typhoon of "violent intensity." The typhoon passed, but what did strike Shanghai was a man-made typhoon of bombs and shrapnel that brought aerial death and destruction such as no city had ever seen before. The clock outside Cathay Hotel stopped at 4:27 p.m. precisely as the first bombs landed on the junction of the Nanking Road and the Bund; the second wave of explosions struck the dense crowds outside the Great World amusement center in the French Concession. This book reconstructs the events of that dreadful day from eyewitness accounts. No truth is hidden behind French’s masterful writing, as you’ll weep through loss of real people in history and get to know Shanghai on an intimate level.
Reviews
"A gripping page turner, it brings the events to life with a tremendous accumulation of detail and anecdote. . . . French is clearly immersed in the history of the period." —South China Morning Post
"Never less than fascinating . . . one of the best portraits of between-the-wars China that has yet been written." —Wall Street Journal on Midnight in Peking
Author Biography
Paul French is the author of the New York Times bestseller Midnight in Peking, which won the Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime and the CWA Non-Fiction Dagger.