In this book, the Daughter of a WWII Aircrewman who flew with the Dolittle Raiders, recounts his story of Heroism, Capture, POW experiences and Career as a Missionary in postwar Japan. It's interesting as a story, but the authors stolid style and the constant barrage of Christian Propaganda sort of detract from the narrative. There are some elements of Christian Ethnocentrism and disdain for Japanese Culture that taint the later parts of the book and the general smugness to the Christianity expressed make it quite unattractive to this reader. Frankly, anytime the Historical Narrative start to get interesting, there's some religious passages that just made my eyes glaze right over. It's basically in interesting book ruined by the attempt to use it for religious ends. For an Atheist reader, who's never been part of a Christian Church its annoying and insulting to all non-believers in a distracting and needless way.
Jacob Deshazer, the subject, grew up an all-american boy in Oregon between the wars. He was attracted to the stability of the Army in the Depression. The story of his selection for the Dolittle team, and the training for the Raid is good stuff. His tale of Japanese POW camp is brutal- and that was where he found "salvation", using his religious feelings to decrease his anger and get along with his captors. But from then on any pages of plot developments tend to get swathed in extra pages of Jesus-centered mumbo jumbo that just asked to be skipped over. The stories of the Same post-war Japan that my father lived in, are marred by the Deshazers' (he married when back in the states) Excessive Christian Chauvinism and Anti Communism. DeShazer never acknowledges the Fascism of PreWar Japan that the Communists were reacting to. The sheer effrontery of Assuming a Western Religion is somehow superior to the existing faith of the locals is NEVER EVEN considered. Typical Christian Chutzpah.
This book is written at a pretty basic level and seems scrubbed of adult themes and graphic wound descriptions so this book is readable for any junior reader over about 10, but parents uncomfortable with Christian Propaganda may want to give context. For the Gamer/Modeller/Military Enthusiast, a mixed bag. The early Military and POW story may help to give background to the WWII story, but the last few chapters will just bore. This is one that's a fun little read- but eminently missable from the Library.