Wounded Tiger

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by T Martin Bennett




  WOUNDED

  TIGER

  “Wounded Tiger is an amazing, enthralling story of how the once obscure lives of an Oregon farmhand and a young co-ed intersected with the Japanese pilot who led the attack on Pearl Harbor. With cultural insight and deep pathos, Martin Bennett brings to life this powerful true chronicle of hatred, surrender, and transformation. Wounded Tiger reveals how ordinary lives lived out faithfully to their calling can impact the destiny of a people and a nation. I wholeheartedly recommend Martin’s work and know that you will find it equally compelling.”

  Ravi Zacharias

  Best selling author and speaker

  “I have read the complete book manuscript. I like the cover which contains the strong face of the young pilot with a full expression of enthusiasm. He is a tiger. He was born in the year of the tiger. You described my father’s posture and behavior so well and so precisely, I could feel his presence.

  He remains a national hero in Japan. I have no idea how the world accepts him today. Some will call him a villain, others will call him a proud warrior who found redemption. I will always admire his guts, his intellect, and his sincerity.”

  Yours cordially,

  Miyako Fuchida Overturf

  (Daughter of Mitsuo Fuchida)

  “Martin, holy smokes! This is a darn good story! It’s woven together seamlessly and all of the characters are truly likeable. It’s such an amazing story that people need to first understand that it’s TRUE. This is a great book and would be an even greater movie. Gotta say, I’m impressed.”

  Dan King, Author of “The Last Zero Fighter”

  Pacific War historian, Japanese language

  & cultural consultant for films

  “The story of Mitsuo Fuchida and his transformation is one of the most gripping stories of WWII and the Pacific War, and it’s a story that few have heard about. Martin Bennett’s new book, Wounded Tiger, brings this epic drama to life with new details on how a Doolittle raider, Jacob DeShazer, and a missionary’s daughter, Peggy Covell, helped effect this change. This thrilling story of war and forgiveness is a must for all.”

  Donald M. Goldstein, PhD,

  author of over 60 articles and 22 books

  including At Dawn We Slept: The Untold Story

  of Pearl Harbor, Miracle at Midway,

  and many others.

  The transmittal of your spoken word resonates as a talking story. I found myself right 'there.' What you've done was inject life and emotion into a part of history either long forgotten or unknown. I commend your perseverance, your passion and most of all, sheer guts to bring this story of forgiveness to life. People can and do change. It's often a mystery as to how or why. It's their story. By the time I read the last line, my life in ways changed also. I look forward to seeing this on the silver screen. It will be an inspiration to many and will leave the audience absolutely breathless.

  Deborah Tokarz

  Producer / Writer

  WOUNDED

  TIGER

  The story of Mitsuo Fuchida, the pilot who led the

  Attack on Pearl Harbor whose life was changed by an

  American prisoner and by a girl he never met.

  The three strands of the extraordinary

  lives of Fuchida, DeShazer and the Covells,

  are ultimately woven into one.

  A Nonfiction Novel

  by

  T Martin Bennett

  Copyright © 2014 Hungry Kitty, LLC

  All rights reserved.

  This book or any portion thereof may not

  be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever

  without the express written permission of the publisher

  except for the use of brief quotations in a book review

  or in accordance with fair use law.

  Published by Ønstad Press

  a division of Hungry Kitty LLC

  Tucson, Arizona

  First Edition, February 2014

  Ordering information:

  www.WoundedTigerBook.com

  Social Networks:

  www.facebook.com/WoundedTigerStory

  www.twitter.com/TMartinBennett

  Media contact:

  [email protected]

  Film investor information:

  [email protected]

  Front cover artwork: Faith Te, www.artisticrealism.com

  Cover Japanese calligraphy: Bokuseki Ohwada

  Paperback book:

  ISBN-13: 978-0-9912290-0-0

  Hardcover book:

  ISBN-13: 978-0-9912290-1-7

  eBook

  ISBN: 978-0-9912290-2-4

  Ebook conversion: eBook Architects, a service of Firebrand Technologies

  Table of Contents

  Maps

  Acknowledgements

  Editors / Manuscript Reviewers

  Introduction

  Prelude: The Sacred Nod

  December 1, 1941. The Imperial Palace. Tokyo, Japan.

  December 8, 1941 (Japan time). Early a.m. before the dawn. The Pacific Ocean several hundred miles north of Hawaii.

  Part I: The Clouds of War

  Chapter 1

  Eighteen years earlier - Spring, 1923. The Imperial Japanese Naval Academy, Etajima Island, Hiroshima, Japan.

  Chapter 2

  September 3, 1923. Kanto Gakuin University, Yokohama, Japan.

  Chapter 3

  January, 1925. San Francisco Bay.

  Chapter 4

  1931, Spring. The Deschutes River, Central Oregon.

  Chapter 5

  1931, Fall. The Kanto Gakuin School, Yokohama, Japan.

  Chapter 6

  January 7, 1932. The Kashiwara Shrine complex, fifteen miles southeast of Osaka.

  Spring, 1932. Yokosuka Naval Base, Tokyo Bay.

  Chapter 7

  Spring, 1932. Central Oregon.

  Chapter 8

  Summer, 1932. The Kanto Gakuin School, Yokohama.

  Chapter 9

  1935. The California-Nevada Border, twenty-five miles northwest of Alturas, California.

  Chapter 10

  1936. Tokyo.

  The Naval Staff College, Tokyo.

  Chapter 11

  Spring, 1937. The Kanto Gakuin School, Yokohama.

  Chapter 12

  Spring, 1937. Medford, Oregon.

  Six Months Later.

  Chapter 13

  Early December, 1937. Hankow, China.

  Chapter 14

  December, 1938. Yokohama.

  June 8, 1939. Yokohama Bay.

  Chapter 15

  November, 1939. The open sea off of the coast of Tokyo.

  Chapter 16

  1940, Spring. Tacoma, Washington.

  Chapter 17

  June, 1940, Central Philippine University on the island of Panay, Iloilo, The Philippines.

  Chapter 18

  October 8, 1940. Tokyo Bay.

  Chapter 19

  July, 1941. Tacoma, Washington.

  Chapter 20

  August, 1941. Kagoshima Air Base on the island of Kyushu, the southernmost main island of Japan.

  September 5, 1941. The Imperial Palace, Tokyo.

  Chapter 21

  Fall, 1941. Keuka College, just outside Rochester, New York.

  Chapter 22

  September, 1941. Kagoshima Air Base. The island of Kyushu, southern Japan.

  Chapter 23

  October, 1941. High desert bombing range, Washington.

  Chapter 24

  October, 1941. Central Philippine University, Iloilo City.

  Chapter 25

  October, 1941. The aircraft carrier Akagi. Yokosuka Naval Base, Tokyo Bay.

  November 17, 1941.

  Chapter 26

  Nov
ember 26, 1941. Just off the Kuril Islands, Japan.

  December 1, 1941. The Imperial Palace, Tokyo, Japan.

  Part II: Thunder and Lightning

  Chapter 27

  December 8, 1941 (Japan), December 7 (USA) before the dawn. The Pacific Ocean, 300 miles north of Oahu, Hawaii.

  Twenty-five minutes before the attack on Pearl Harbor. Kota Bharu, Malaya, 350 miles northwest from the British stronghold of Singapore.

  Five minutes before the attack. Oahu, Hawaii.

  Pearl Harbor, Oahu, Hawaii.

  3:18 a.m. Japanese Standard Time, December 8.

  7:48 a.m. Hawaiian Time, December 7.

  10:50 a.m. Pacific Time, McChord Field, Tacoma, Washington.

  2: 10 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, Keuka College outside Rochester, New York.

  Chapter 28

  Just past noon, the aircraft carrier Akagi.

  Chapter 29

  December 7, three hours after the attack on Pearl Harbor, McChord Field, Tacoma, Washington.

  Five hours after the attack, Central Philippines University.

  Six hours after the attack, Kai Tak Airport, Hong Kong.

  Six hours after the attack, Tokyo, Japan.

  Eight hours after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Clark Air Base, about forty miles northwest of Manila, Philippines.

  Chapter 30

  December 10, 1941. The Imperial Palace.

  December 23, 1941. Kanoya Air Base.

  December 26, 1941. The Imperial Palace.

  Chapter 31

  Late December, 1941. Central Philippines University.

  Chapter 32

  January 22, 1942. Rabaul, New Guinea.

  Royal Australian Air Force Headquarters (RAAF), Telecommunication Unit, Melbourne, Australia.

  Rabaul.

  February 19, 1942. Darwin, Australia.

  Chapter 33

  February, 1942. Katipunan, Panay, the Philippines.

  Chapter 34

  February, 1942. Columbia Army Air Base. Columbia, South Carolina.

  Chapter 35

  March 3, 1942. The southern coast of Java.

  Chapter 36

  March, 1942. Elgin Air Base, Florida.

  Madras, Oregon.

  Chapter 37

  April 1, 1942. San Francisco Harbor. The carrier USS Hornet.

  Chapter 38

  Early April, 1942. The open sea, east of Singapore.

  Part III: The Eagle’s Talons

  Chapter 39

  April 12, 1942. USS Hornet. The Pacific Ocean.

  Chapter 40

  April 12, 1942. Downtown Nagoya, Japan.

  April 18, 1942. Nagoya.

  Chapter 41

  April 18, 1942. The Pacific Ocean 700 miles east of Japan.

  Chapter 42

  April 18, 1942. The open seas, southwest of Japan. The aircraft carrier Akagi.

  Chapter 43

  The Pacific Ocean, just east of Nagoya, Japan.

  Chapter 44

  Somewhere over China.

  Early a.m., China.

  Chapter 45

  April 19, 1942. Nagoya, Japan.

  Chapter 46

  April 19, 1942. The aircraft carrier Akagi. East of mainland Japan.

  Chapter 47

  April, 1942. The Island of Panay

  Chapter 48

  April 20, 1942. Nanchang, China.

  Chapter 49

  Late April, 1942. The battleship Yamato. Hashirajima Bay, 25 miles due south of Hiroshima.

  Chapter 50

  Late April, 1942. The Imperial Palace.

  Chapter 51

  Late April, 1942. The Battleship Yamato.

  Chapter 52

  Late April, 1942. Madras, Oregon.

  Chapter 53

  Late April, 1942. Nanking, China.

  Chapter 54

  May 1, 1942. The Battleship Yamato. Hashirajima Bay, 25 miles south of Hiroshima.

  Chapter 55

  May 27, 1942. One week before the battle.

  Part IV: Blood in the Water

  Chapter 56

  June 4, 1942, 3:00 a.m. The aircraft carrier Akagi. 250 miles northwest of Midway Island.

  5:31 a.m.

  5:56 a.m., Midway Island.

  6:41 a.m.

  7:10 a.m.

  7:53 a.m.

  8:09 a.m.

  8:30 a.m.

  Chapter 57

  8:50 a.m.

  8:55 a.m. The battleship Yamato.

  8:55 a.m. The carrier Akagi.

  9:18 a.m.

  9:38 a.m.

  Chapter 58

  10:00 a.m. The battleship Yamato.

  10:10 a.m. The carrier Akagi.

  Chapter 59

  June, 1942. The island of Panay, the Philippines.

  Chapter 60

  June, 1942. Tokyo.

  Chapter 61

  June, 1942. The Imperial General Headquarters, Tokyo.

  Chapter 62

  June, 1942. Tokyo.

  Chapter 63

  July, 1942. Madras, Oregon.

  Chapter 64

  July, 1942. Yokosuka Base Hospital, Tokyo Bay.

  Chapter 65

  August, 1942. Hopevale, the Philippines.

  Chapter 66

  August, 1942. Keuka College, New York.

  Chapter 67

  August 28, 1942. Shanghai, China.

  Chapter 68

  October 15, 1942. Kiangwan Military Prison, Shanghai, China.

  Chapter 69

  The following morning.

  Chapter 70

  December, 1942. Madras, Oregon.

  Chapter 71

  December, 1942. Hopevale.

  Chapter 72

  December 28, 1942, Hopevale.

  Chapter 73

  Early April, 1943. Rabaul Air Base, the Australian Territory of New Guinea.

  Chapter 74

  April 19, 1943. Yokosuka Naval Base, Tokyo Bay.

  Chapter 75

  April 23, 1943. Madras, Oregon.

  Chapter 76

  Early July, 1943. Tama Reien Cemetery, Tokyo.

  Chapter 77

  July, 1943. Hopevale.

  Chapter 78

  July, 1943. Japanese Headquarters. Iloilo City, Panay.

  Chapter 79

  August, 1943. Nanking, China.

  Chapter 80

  August, 1943. The Andrus Farm. Madras, Oregon.

  Chapter 81

  Fall, 1943. Keuka College, New York.

  Chapter 82

  September, 1943. Yokosuka Naval Base, Tokyo Bay.

  The Philippine Islands.

  Chapter 83

  October, 1943. Hopevale. The Philippines.

  Chapter 84

  November, 1943. The island of Panay. The Philippines.

  Chapter 85

  Early December, 1943. Nanking, China.

  Tokyo, Japan.

  One week later, Nanking, China.

  Chapter 86

  December 10, 1943. Hopevale. The Philippines.

  December 14, 1943. Twenty eight miles north of Hopevale.

  December 19, Hopevale.

  The next day.

  Chapter 87

  Early February, 1944. Saipan.

  Chapter 88

  February 22, 1944. Yokosuka Naval Base. Tokyo Bay.

  The next day. Tinian Island. The Mariana Islands.

  The following afternoon.

  Part V: No Damn Hypocrite

  Chapter 89

  May, 1944. Nanking, China.

  Chapter 90

  May, 1944. Keuka College. New York.

  Chapter 91

  Morning, June 19, 1944. The aircraft carrier Taiho. The Pacific Ocean between the Philippines and the Mariana Islands.

  Chapter 92

  Two weeks later. Saipan.

  Chapter 93

  July 14, 1944. Northern Honshu, Japan.

  Chapter 94

  Fall, 1944. Nanking, China.

  Chapter 95

  Fall, 1944. Downtown
Rochester, New York.

  Chapter 96

  October, 1944. Tokyo, Japan.

  Chapter 97

  October, 1944. Yokosuka Naval Base, Tokyo Bay.

  Chapter 98

  November, 1944. Nanking, China.

  Chapter 99

  November, 1944. Granada, Colorado.

  Chapter 100

  November, 1944. Nanking, China.

  Early December, 1944. Nanking, China.

  December 25, 1944.

  Chapter 101

  March 10, 1945. Tokyo, Japan.

  March 18, 1945. Tokyo, Japan.

  Chapter 102

  April, 1945. Nanking, China.

  June 15, 1945.

  Chapter 103

  August 5, 1945. Hiroshima Military Complex.

  Part VI: The Light of A Thousand Suns

  Chapter 104

  7:00 a.m., August 6, 1945. Peking, China.

  Chapter 105

  8:15 a.m., the same day. Hiroshima, Japan.

  9:05 a.m., Yamato Naval Base.

  Chapter 106

  August 6, 1945. 1:40 p.m. The skies above Japan.

  The following day.

  Chapter 107

  11:01 a.m., August 9, 1945. Nagasaki, Japan.

  1:30 a.m., August 10, 1945. Tokyo, Japan.

  Chapter 108

  August 12, 1945. OSS Headquarters, Kunming, China.

  Chapter 109

  12:00 p.m. noon, August 15, 1945. Yokosuka, Japan.

  Chapter 110

  August 15, 1945. Madras, Oregon.

  Chapter 111

  August 17, 1945. Kure Naval Hospital, 15 miles from Hiroshima.

  Chapter 112

  August 17, 1945. Peking, China.

  August 20, 1945.

  Chapter 113

  August 21, 1945. Madras, Oregon.

  Chapter 114

  August 31, 1945. Tateyama Naval Base, Tokyo Bay.

  Chapter 115

  9:00 a.m., September 2, 1945. Tokyo.

  Chapter 116

  September, 1945. Madras, Oregon.

  A few weeks later.

  Chapter 117

  Early December, 1945. Tokyo.

  The mountains of Chichibu, 50 miles northwest of Tokyo.

  Chapter 118

  Three weeks later. Yokosuka Naval Base, Tokyo Bay.

  January, 1946. Rabaul, New Britain. The Australian Territory of New Guinea.

  Chapter 119

  March, 1946. Seattle Pacific College, Seattle, Washington.

  Chapter 120

  Summer, 1946. Kashiwara.

  Chapter 121

  August 29, 1946. Portland, Oregon.

  Part VII: Why Are You Here?

  Chapter 122

  June, 1947. Osaka.

  Uraga Harbor, SE of the Yokosuka Naval Base.

  Chapter 123

  June, 1948. Seattle, Washington.

  Chapter 124

  December 3, 1948. Tokyo. Shibuya Train Station.

 

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