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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
New York Times best-selling author David L. Robbins has entrenched himself as the master of the World War II novel. Telling the gripping story of the 1945 rescue of allied prisoners from the Los BaNos camp near Manila, Broken Jewel received tremendous critical acclaim, including starred reviews from Library Journal and Kirkus Reviews.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 24, 2009
      Robbins's ninth novel, the best WWII Pacific campaign novel in a long time, tells the dramatic story of the 1945 rescue of 2,100 American and allied prisoners from the Los Baños camp near Manila. Middle-aged gambler Remy Tuck and his teenage son, Talbot, have been civilian prisoners since the Philippines fell to the Japanese in 1942. Packed into the miserable Los Baños, where the Japanese starve, beat, abuse and murder the prisoners, Remy and Talbot use their wits and courage to survive. Across the camp, Carmen is a young Filipina woman forced to be a sex slave for Japanese soldiers. She and Talbot forge a relationship via long-distance glances through barbed wire. Once the Americans invade the Philippines and plan a daring mission to rescue the prisoners from certain death, Remy, Talbot and Carmen risk their lives to aid the paratroopers coming to their rescue, though bad luck, homicidal guards and stray bullets nearly do them in. This is a terrific story of the triumph of the human spirit, loaded with suspense, historical accuracy and fast-paced action.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      In 1945, after receiving word that the Japanese were planning to massacre American and other Allied prisoners at the Los Baûos camp near Manila, the American 11th Airborne Division and Filipino guerilla forces attacked the camp and rescued 2,100 internees. Robbins's novel, based on these actual events, centers on father and son Remy and Tal Tuck and Carmen, a Filipina forced into sexual slavery, as they struggle to survive desperate living conditions, starvation, and the brutal abuses of their Japanese captors. George Guidall's narration delivers every ounce of courage, suspense, and humanity Robbins intends. Guidall can be omnipresent and invisible all at once. His subtlety adds depth to every character. With only slight vocal shifts, he transmits volumes. Artful storytelling. Artful performance. Worthwhile listening. S.J.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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