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FIRST EDITION, The Hogarth Press, 1954, hardcover, 59 pages, booksellers label, chain paper stock, dust jacket(dj) protector, slight stains to first page of story and opposite page. some edgeware & loss to lower edge of front of dj, otherwise condition: very good.
Dedicated to William Plomer, legendary SA editor (Goldfinger is dedicated to him by Fleming), the story first appeared in 'The Cornhill' magazine.
This is the story of Hara, a Japanese sergeant in virtual command of a prisoner-of-war camp. It is more than a little autobiographical for Colonel van der Post was himself a prisoner in the Far East. The book is a penetrating study of the Japanese mentality, the Japanese myth, as personified by this demonic, naive, brutal, weirdly idealistic sergeant. How Hara's curiosity about Father Christmas saves a British Prisoner from the death-cell, and how this officer later spoke up for his torturer at a War Crimes Tribunal, provide the climaxes of a book which proves once again that truth is far stranger than fiction. But A Bar of Shadow does something more. It shows that men not only must but can love their and it shows how this most difficult love may be achieved by a courageous imaginative understanding.