Leigh has pulled together an impressive array of sources, both official and personal (including numerous recollections and images still in private possession), which he has sifted through with great diligence and skill ... [Leigh] has produced a ?ne work, rich in detail and persuasive in its presentation, to illustrate where and how the tragedy of the evacuation unfolded. This makes the book a valuable contribution to the study of the Second World War in the East. * South East Asia Research *
The tormenting and breathtaking adventures of the thousands of people from British Burma recreated by Michael Leigh is truly an extraordinary story of the India-Burma-China theater of World War II, largely unknown to the current world. * Angelene Naw, Professor Emerita and Scholar in Residence, Judson University, USA *
This is a compelling account of the destruction of British rule in Burma at the hands of the Japanese in the first months of 1942, of the evacuation of hundreds of thousands, Indians as well as Europeans, back to India in the wake of the collapse, and of the ultimately failed British attempt to re-establish effective control over Burma following the return of the colonial administration in mid-1945. Due weight is given to the politics of these events. But Michael Leigh's main focus is on the experience of individuals, from the highest levels of the colonial government, down through the middle ranks, to the vast numbers of the poorest Indians who had once found work in Burma. Meticulously researched and vividly written, this often harrowing account returns to history events and individuals far too long ignored or unknown. * Ian Brown, Emeritus Professor of the Economic History, SOAS, University of London, UK *
With his engaging writing style and keen observations, Mike Leigh provided a rare account of the final days of the British rule in a remote corner of Burma. Chaos, cholera, death and human tragedy can teach us as important history lessons as wars and empire projects can, and Mike Leigh wonderfully brought out humanistic elements of the known past. A claim for a long mirror from a British elite evacuee tells as much important a story as a treaty. I hope this book will usher in more histories from below to do justice for the forgotten evacuees of the 1942 exodus, i.e. Indians and locals. * Tharapi Than, Associate Professor of Southeast Asian Studies, Northern Illinois University, USA *