cover image The Railway Man: A POW's Searing Account of War, Brutality and Forgiveness

The Railway Man: A POW's Searing Account of War, Brutality and Forgiveness

Eric Lomax. W. W. Norton & Company, $22 (276pp) ISBN 978-0-393-03910-8

Lomax, a British Army signals officer, was captured by the victorious Japanese during the Singapore campaign in 1942. Fascinated by railroads ever since his childhood in Edinburgh, he took what pleasure he could in the irony of his slave-labor assignment as a POW: the construction of the Burma-Siam Railroad, made famous later in the David Lean film Bridge over the River Kwai. When guards discovered his lovingly detailed map of the right-of-way, Lomax was turned over to the Japanese secret police as a suspected spy. In the subsequent torture sessions, the interpreter, a young man named Nagase Takeshi, played a prominent role in the effort to break him down. Half a century later, by what he calls ""an incredible and precious coincidence,'' Lomax learned that Takeshi was still living. A meeting of reconciliation at the Kwai River, which Lomax at first suspected was a fraudulent publicity stunt, was arranged. His graceful and restrained account of how the two men eventually became ``blood-brothers'' after Lomax granted Takeshi full forgiveness is deeply moving. (Sept.)