THE ROAD PAST MANDALAY (341 pp.) John MastersHarper ($5).
The shelves sag with books about World War II turned out by professional writers who served as amateur soldiers, and by professional soldiers who became amateur writers. The two groups often seem to be writing about different wars. Into the no-man's land between the two camps moves John Masters, who from 1934 to 1947 was a professional soldier of a particularly proud breedan officer in the Indian army. Since then, he has become a professional writer with seven novels about India to his credit (Bhowani Junction, Nightrunners of Bengal, The Venus of Konpara). In his autobiographical The Road Past Mandalay, Masters uses his novelist's insight and his soldier's knowledge to write an absorbing, sharply distinctive story of World War II as fought in the East.
The Road Past Mandalay is a sequel to Bugles and a Tiger, published in 1956, in which Masters told how a schoolboy became a soldier. The new book tells how the soldier became a man. After eight years in the army, the 28-year-old Masters was assigned in 1943 to the Long Range Penetration force commanded by the famed and fanatical Orde Wingate. "You're going to die," Wingate rasped at one of the men, and the prediction seemed likely. Supplied entirely by air, the brigade was to go 150 miles behind the Japanese lines in Burma and stage the daring attacks and ambushes that made Wingate a legend.
Blood & Mud. Major Masters led his disciplined Gurkhas of the 111th Indian Infantry Brigade on slashing raids against the Japanese and on harrowing night marches. Then he learned what war was really like: he was ordered to make a stand at a point code-named Blackpool. Outnumbered and outgunned. Masters' men were slowly driven back. "I wanted to cry," he writes, "but dared not, could only mutter 'Well done, well done.' " The brutality of battle numbed both armies. "A Cameronian lieutenant fell head-first into a weapon pit and two Japanese soldiers five yards away leaned weakly on their rifles and laughed, slowly, while the officer struggled to his feet, slowly, and trudged up the slope. The shells fell slowly and burst with long, slow detonations, and the men collapsed slowly to the ground, blood flowing in gentle gouts into the mud."
Later, as he ordered the retreat from Blackpool, Masters was faced with the decision of what to do with 19 hopelessly wounded stretcher cases"the first man was quite naked and a shell had removed the entire contents of his stomach . . . another seemed to have been torn in pieces by a mad giant." To avoid holding up the retreat. Masters ordered the men shot. "One by one, carbine shots exploded curtly behind me. I put my hands over my ears, but nothing could shut out the sound ... I muttered, 'I'm sorry,' and 'Forgive me,' and hurried on."
