Survivor on the River Kwai Survivor on the River Kwai

Survivor on the River Kwai

The Incredible Story of Life on the Burma Railway

    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings
    • $10.99
    • $10.99

Publisher Description

Survivor on the River Kwai is the heartbreaking story of Reg Twigg, one of the last men standing from a forgotten war.

Called up in 1940, Reg expected to be fighting Germans. Instead, he found himself caught up in the worst military defeat in modern British history - the fall of Singapore to the Japanese.

What followed were three years of hell, moving from one camp to another along the Kwai river, building the infamous Burma railway for the all-conquering Japanese Imperial Army. Some prisoners coped with the endless brutality of the code of Bushido by turning to God; others clung to whatever was left of the regimental structure. Reg made the deadly jungle, with its malaria, cholera, swollen rivers, lethal snakes and exhausting heat, work for him. With an ingenuity that is astonishing, he trapped and ate lizards, harvested pumpkins from the canteen rubbish heap and with his homemade razor became camp barber.

That Reg survived is testimony to his own courage and determination, his will to beat the alien brutality of camp guards who had nothing but contempt for him and his fellow POWs. He was a risk taker whose survival strategies sometimes bordered on genius.

Reg's story is unique.

Reg Twigg was born at Wigston (Leicester) barracks on 16 December 1913. He was called up to the Leicestershire Regiment in 1940 but instead of fighting Hitler he was sent to the Far East, stationed at Singapore. When captured by the Japanese, he decided he would do everything to survive.

After his repatriation from the Far East, Reg returned to Leicester. With his family he returned to Thailand in 2006, and revisited the sites of the POW camps. Reg died in 2013, at the age of ninety-nine, two weeks before the publication of this book.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2013
May 23
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
336
Pages
PUBLISHER
Penguin Books Ltd
SELLER
Penguin Books Limited
SIZE
7.1
MB

Customer Reviews

photogenec ,

How Can One Remember So Much?

Over the last decade, I have become a dedicated non-fiction reader. The memoirs and real life accounts that have come out of the terrible World Word II epic, for me, are some of the greatest stories I have ever read. Count 'Survivor on the River Kwai' amongst that superb collection.

This book has amazing detail. I wonder in awe how the author could have remembered it all. Diaries were not allowed in the prison camps, punishable by death if found. I suspect Reg Twigg started writing down everything he could the day the notices came floating from the sky, letting the dreadful few prisoners know that the war with Japan was over.

Those of us who never served our country, never fought in a war, need to honor those that died for our liberty by reading their stories.

This one is superb.

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