Please do. I’ve read several books you have mentioned that have reinforced my ideas or caused me to rethink issues or outright change my mind.
Ok. This is a top 10. And for a bonus, I’ll add two of the most prominent on the opposing side (more or less).
Richard Frank/DOWNFALL. Best single book on understanding what went on. Essential.
Robert James Maddox/WEAPONS FOR VICTORY: THE HIROSHIMA DECISION. One of the primary anti-revisionist scholars
Robert James Maddox (ed.) HIROSHIMA IN HISTORY: THE MYTHS OF REVISIONISM. A collection of anti-revisionist scholars take on the myths.
Robert Newman/TRUMAN AND THE HIROSHIMA CULT. An excellent, crisply written treatment of eight questions often seen in discussions like this, by a scholar who really doesn’t like nuclear weapons, generally.
Robert P. Newman/ENOLA GAY AND THE COURT OF HISTORY. Newman does it again.
Barrett Tillman/WHIRLWIND: THE AIR WAR AGAINST JAPAN 1942-1945. A good account of the overall air war by a good scholar of the Pacific theater.
Thomas Allen & Norman Polmar/CODENAME DOWNFALL. Not as detailed as Frank, but good.
The Pacific War Research Society/JAPAN"S LONGEST DAY. Japanese scholars’ account of the last 24 hours before the Emperor’s surrender broadcast. A good insight into the minds of the ruling military clique.
D.M Giangreco/HELL TO PAY:OPERATION DOWNFALL AND THE INVASION OF JAPAN, 1945-1947. Good analysis of the Japanese and American preparations for the invasions and how they might have played out over two years, by a primary anti-revisionist historian.
George Feifer/TENNOZAN:THE BATTLE OF OKINAWA AND THE ATOMIC BOMB. A massive, gut-wrenching account of the battle for Okinawa, first of the Home Islands invaded, and what it directly foretold, on a small scale, of what a full scale invasion would be. The very name of the book, referring to a decisive battle, is related to what the Japanese planned against DOWNFALL, and illustrated, in miniature, on Okinawa. A hard book to read.
Bonus: two bad/not so good books.
Gar Alperovitz/THE DECISION TO USE THE ATOMIC BOMB. The doyen of current revisionist writers. Bad stuff doesn’t get any better.
Tsuyoshi Hasegawa/RACING THE ENEMY. A fair, middle of the road assessment by a guy I tend to think of as the Anglican/
via media of the group. Manages to stay friends with Frank and Alperovitz.
Go for it.
GKC