I'm somewhat biased. I currently live near Castletownbere in County Cork, Ireland, where Aidan grew up. I never knew him. But having read this book, I so much wish I could shake his hand. And ask him a single, all-important question: How did you survive and endure?
A Doctor's War is the factual story of young Doctor McCarthy and his journey through World War II. An Irishman, Aidan volunteered for Britain's Royal Air Force just prior to the outbreak of hostilities. Posted in France, he survived Dunkirk. Then posted in the islands of the South Pacific, he was captured by the Japanese, a captivity that he ultimately survived.
This book is not only about survival, but also about strength and courage. Here is a young man that somehow escaped drowning when his prison boat was sunk by the Allies during transportation back to the Japanese mainland. It is a first-person journey through the horrific realities of war: beatings, executions, starvation and disease. It touches on how luck plays a crucial role: finally held at a prison in Nagasaki, only luck allowed him and others to survive the world's second atom bomb used in anger.
But A Doctor's War is much, much more. Despite his cruel captivity, Aidan constantly works to save the lives not only of his fellow prisoners but when offered the opportunity, also his captors. And it is a book of faith: McCarthy firmly believes that his faith in God was instrumental in finding the courage and will to survive.
I read the book in a single sitting. Having reached the end, closed the cover, and considered his story, I was dumbstruck: Aidan McCarthy should not have survived. And yet - he did. This is a story that affected me. His simple, always humble words forces me to sit up and take in the simple beauty of the world.
Because of Aidan, it makes me realize how wonderful it is to be alive.