Author: David Gormley-O'Brien
Published: August 2025
ISBN: 978-1-7641991-0-0
Paperback RRP: AUD $25.00
Kindle e-book: AUD $11.99 on Amazon
Kobo/Google Play epub file: $11.99
In September 1945, on a sweltering parade ground at Morotai, Australian troops watch as General Sir Thomas Blamey accepts the surrender of the Japanese Second Army. For Corporal Tom Davis, the ceremony brings neither triumph nor relief. The war has ended—but something within him remains unsettled.
Ashes & Sakura is a sweeping work of historical fiction set in the uneasy aftermath of the Second World War. Moving from the battlefields of New Guinea and Borneo to the shattered cities of occupied Japan, and from rural New South Wales to the political chambers shaping Australia’s post-war ambitions, the novel explores what happens when the guns fall silent but the reckoning has only just begun.
Tom Davis has survived campaigns that killed many of his mates. He has endured jungle warfare, seen the brutal treatment of prisoners, and lived with the randomness of survival. Now stranded on Morotai among thousands of battle-weary Australians waiting for transport home, he finds himself adrift—caught between the life he left behind and the man the war has made him.
Around him, others wrestle with their own burdens. Eric Jenkins, a gentle scholar-soldier and pigeon handler, volunteers for service with the newly formed British Commonwealth Occupation Force, drawn by a fascination with Japan’s culture even as bitterness toward the enemy lingers among the ranks. Les, a hard-bitten veteran of the Middle East, Greece, New Guinea and the Philippines, longs only for home and rails against the Army’s indifference. Army nurses return from captivity in Japanese prison camps, carrying scars less visible than their emaciated frames suggest. Italian prisoners of war working on Australian farms leave behind complicated attachments and unspoken loyalties.
As Australia commits itself to occupying Japan and asserting a new regional role in the Pacific, its soldiers enter a land reduced to ash—Hiroshima’s ruins still smouldering, cities flattened, civilians hungry and defeated. Amid the rubble, unexpected encounters unfold between occupier and occupied. Prejudice collides with curiosity. Vengeance wrestles with compassion. For Tom, a tentative relationship with a young Japanese woman forces him to question what victory truly means.
Grounded in official war diaries, contemporary newspaper accounts, and personal memoirs, Ashes & Sakura recreates the lifeworld of 1945–47 with meticulous detail. Real historical events—the Morotai surrender, the war crimes trials, the formation of the British Commonwealth Occupation Force in Japan, the repatriation of prisoners—interweave with imagined lives shaped by duty, shame, love, and disillusionment.
This is not a tale of battlefield glory. It is a story of survival without certainty, of a nation coming of age in the shadow of empire, and of individuals attempting to rebuild themselves in a world that has been irrevocably altered.
A companion to An Attractive Naivety, it continues the Becoming Australia series by David Gormley-O’Brien, author and historian based in Victoria.
What readers are saying about Ashes and Sakura
Anna HainesI really liked this way of learning about Australia's history. There is such a beauty to the characters in the book, their passions, love and tenderness. The lightness on character depth allowed me to remember that this story is actually about real events in history and real experiences and dilemmas. Meanwhile those reflections on the last page stay with me still.
CarolineI enjoyed Ashes and Sakura even more than David’s previous book An Attractive Naivety. It is a rich blending of historical detail with an engaging story following the experiences of members of the Darcy and Davis families during the Second World War. I found it hard to put down. Can’t wait for the next book of the series to be available.
Geoff Cumming'An Attractive Naivety' used a narrative largely of a broad range of members of the Darcy-Davis family to illuminate the history of Australia in the first four or so decades of last century. 'Ashes & Sakura', the sequel, is more tightly focused on the last couple of years of the Second World War and the first couple of years after its end. The main characters are again from the Darcy-Davis family; it is good to be with them again. We start on an army base on Morotai, an Indonesian island, then continue with the occupying military forces in southern Japan. We also make several visits to the families back home.
The narrative is particularly strong, often gripping, also complex, nuanced, and always evolving. It is fascinating to learn of the highly varied attitudes of the 'winners' and 'losers' and how these changed. It is good to have the Darcy-Davis family tree as an appendix.
A beautiful historical novel, highly recommended.

