South Royalton, Vermont: Steerforth Press L.C., 1999. First Edition [stated], presumed first printing. Hardcover. viii, [2], 257, [5] pages. Ian T. MacMillan (March 23, 1941 - December 18, 2008) was a Hawaii-based scholar and novelist. From 1966 to 2008 he was a professor of English at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. The author of eight novels and six short story collections, MacMillan founded the literary journal Hawaii Review in 1973. Beginning in 1992, he also served as the fiction editor for Manoa: A Pacific Journal of International Writing. His work was anthologized in The Best American Short Stories and The Best of Triquarterly. He was a graduate of the State University of New York and the University of Iowa. Called "the Stephen Crane of World War II" by Kurt Vonnegut, MacMillan was the recipient of a number of literary awards, including the Hawaii Award for Literature in 1992, the O. Henry Award, the Elliot Cades Award for Literature in 2007, and the Pushcart Prize. He was honored in 2010 by the creation of the Ian MacMillan Writing Awards in his memory at the University of Hawaii. His novel Village of a Million Spirits received the PEN Center USA Award for Fiction in 2000. On August 2, 1943, prisoners of the Treblinka concentration camp, armed with stolen guns and grenades, attacked their guards, set fire to the "factory of death," and fled into the neighboring forest. Of the six hundred prisoners who escaped, only forty lived, but their survival insured that the horrors they witnessed and an account of their desperate revolt reached the outside world. This book is a fictionalized account of this story, told from the viewpoints of the Nazi guards, the victims, and residents of the surrounding countryside. More