Yes. The book is not a "novel", i.e. fictional account, as many online sources seem to suggest, instead it was originally a peice of journalism published in Time magazine. The people included in the book are real survivors of the bomb, and Hersey was the first journalist to go in and collect their stories.
A Jesuit priest, a widowed seamstress, two doctors, a minister, and a young woman who worked in a factory.
John Hersey
John Hersey's purpose in writing Hiroshima was to tell the story of what really happened in Hiroshima. Although the memory of Hiroshima was still very much fresh in the minds of Americans at the time, they really didn't have the slightest clue as to how bad it really was. By telling individual stories of real people, Hersey accomplished a very personal tone as opposed to writing an informational book.
He was not a real person, rather a fictional character meant to signify soldiers in general. The name "John brown" is usually used in society when referring to a fictional common entity much like "keeping up with the Jones'"
No. Joe Castle is a fictional first baseman who played for the Cubs in the novel Calico Joe by John Grisham. His character is based on Ray Chapman, the only MLB player killed by a pitch.
The site "Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki" might lead you to some answers.
Reverend Parris and John are fictional characters in the book, The Crucible. Reverend Parris accused John of leading the factions to be against him.
John-Boy Walton from the TV series The Waltons is probably the best known of the many fictional characters known as John Boy.
A Jesuit priest, a widowed seamstress, two doctors, a minister, and a young woman who worked in a factory.
Little John and Robin Hood
The fictional character John Connor got famous for appearing in the Terminator films. He was the daughter of Sarah Connor and leader of the human resistance against the machines. He was one of the lead characters of Terminator 2.
No, both Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are fictional characters invented by the author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
John Hersey
The Joads are fictional characters created by author John Steinbeck for his novel "The Grapes of Wrath," published in 1939. The book follows the Joad family as they struggle through the Great Depression in the 1930s.
No, "The Milagro Beanfield War" is a work of fiction written by John Nichols. While the novel is set in a realistic rural New Mexico town, its characters and events are entirely fictional.
No, Lennie and George did not buck barley. They were fictional characters from John Steinbeck's novel "Of Mice and Men" who worked as ranch hands.
millions of innocent lives were taken. Recommended reading: "Hiroshima" by John Hershey (won a Pulitzer Prize)