He's in the destroyers now, Review

He's in the destroyers now,
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Lieutenant William Exton Junior who wrote: "He's on a destroyer now," later changed to: "He's in the destroyers now." I have not seen this book for sale under US$55.00 as it is highly sought after by serious naval collectors as their libabries would be quite incomplete without it! The elite ships of the United States Navy are: 1) Destroyers 2) Submarines 3) Aircraft Carriers, not necessarily in the order! Commanders of destroyers, submarines, and aircraft carriers were those officers who achieved flag rank such as Fleet Admirals William Frederick Halsey Junior, Ernest Joseph King, William Daniel Leahy, and Chester William Nimitz. Lieutenant Exton explains that the destroyer class of ship came into being as a weapon against the toredo boat which itself came about as a cheap weapom against capital ships. The destryoer in fact was developed out of the torpedo boat design. When opportunity provided, the destroyer itself could fulfill the mission of the torpedo boats and attack capial ships with torpedoes. Destroyers were capable, being larger and more durable than torpedo boats, of serving as scout ships for the fleet. Eventually they became the workhorses of the world's navies. They were small, expendable, and supremely seaworthy. He explains the destroyer with the first one commissioned in November 1902, the U.S.S. Bainbridge (DD-1), followed in May 1903 with the U.S.S. Hull (DD-7), and the U.S.S. Lawrence (DD-8) the following month, etc. These became classes of ships that others were modeled after. Of these two books of slightly different titles, both are the same! A naval library would not be complete without this book, if you see it, don't hesitate, buy it immediately if not sooner! Sarge Booker of Tujunga, California

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He Saw The Elephant: Confederate Naval Saga of Lt. Charles "Savvy" Read, CSN Review

He Saw The Elephant: Confederate Naval Saga of Lt. Charles Savvy Read, CSN
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Why would you jack this book up. They sell in the stores for $25, all of Clarke's books are $25 or less, over that HAHA ridiculous, get a life.

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Code Name Antidote Review

Code Name Antidote
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With the US Navy shooting up the Oslo harbor and Seals landing in the public park, we are asked to believe the US diplomat 'has a challenge' in handling the Norwegian government. This doesn't include the numerous bodies that the CIA "cleaners" have to dispose of. C'mon. It's like Rambo in a book.
The story is slightly disjointed, the characters are hard to follow and the pace uneven.
Sorry to say, only the cover and packaging were well done - promising a story that didn't deliver.

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Political Influence of Naval Force in Hi Review

Political Influence of Naval Force in Hi
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As an avid naval strategy reader, I had much anticipated this work's release. However, after finishing it, I was mildly disappointed, as Cable sets overly rigorous standards in defining the allowable circumstances for true political impacts by naval events. For this reason it is often smaller naval incidents which are discussed, rather than most major naval actions.
Also, Cable virtually eliminates all ancient naval actions from consideration, as he views ancient naval activity as being ultimately dependent upon land-based military technology (such as the Roman corvus); this is due to the lack of true naval clash in the modern big-gun ship sense (characteristic only of the last few centuries).
This is not a bad book, but it will definitely appeal mainly to more academic types interested in squeezing analysis out of small, tightly-defined historical circumstances.

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For five centuries, many governments have used naval force to serve their political purposes, but political success didnot always reward the strongest navy. This international history of naval force as a political instrument, whether in peace or war, ranges from Calicut, navally cannonaded in 1501, to Baghdad, assailed by sea-launched missiles in 1991.

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Corvettes Canada: Convoy Veterans of WWII Tell Their True Stories Review

Corvettes Canada: Convoy Veterans of WWII Tell Their True Stories
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This is a story that almost no one seems to know about. I cant imagine being inside a 200 ft. tin can, in the worst possible weather for 3 or 4 years, fighting faster, better equipped U-boats (the corvettes were modified whalers with a 4 inch gun), with only a few breaks in between the battles. The corvettes weren't designed for prolonged ocean travel(mostly for coastal patrols) and yet they did the bulk of the allied ocean convoy work. I haven't finished the book yet, but I am thoroughly enjoying it so far.

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The Boats of Men-of-War: Revised Edition Review

The Boats of Men-of-War: Revised Edition
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This is one of the very few books that deals with small, ancillary boats rather than on the biggest, fastest, or latest ships or yachts. It gives a history of British military ship's boats, from the earliest known specifications through the steam era. This includes myraid boat plans, scantling dimensions, sail and rigging details, armament, and period illustrations.
While I would have liked a bit more in the operational side of the boat use and more on the preferred woods used, this is very minor. Overall, I found this a good and thorough work.
Excellent, as are many of the books I've seen from the Naval Institute Press.

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In the age of sail, the boats carried by the men-of-war were an essential part of the ship's outfitting. They were necessary to move stores, act as the "engine" in confined waters, serve as amphibious raiders, and even to cruise independently as tenders to the mother ship. Over the centuries there have been many sizes, hull forms, and rigs employed, so the exact details proved a problem for model makers, marine artists, and builders of replicas.In 1974 the original edition of this book was published by the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich, England. Still the only complete study of this neglected topic, the book has now been revised and expanded to include more illustrations. It covers the sizes and types of boats formally allocated, the methods of hoisting and stowing them aboard ship, and the design and construction of the boats themselves, as well as their fittings, rigs, and armament, including guns, howitzers, and Congreve rockets. Although primarily devoted to the age of sail, the book also covers the steamboats of the late nineteenth century.Ship modelers, historians of the sailing navy, and small-craft enthusiasts will welcome this new edition.

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At War With The Wind Review

At War With The Wind
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This is a quite remarkable assemblage of anecdotes detailing the carnage wrought by Japanese aerial and naval suicide campaigns conducted against Allied forces in the Pacific during World War II. The bulk of the book consists of explicit, blow-by-blow descriptions of a number of these horrifyingly deadly attacks. Sears obviously went to great lengths to obtain official action summaries, diaries, letters, first-hand accounts by survivors, interviews with unsuccessful attackers, and many other sources providing vivid portrayals of the incidents.
Despite the value of Sears' depictions as a record of the atrocities resulting from the kamikaze phenomenon, this book's readability and overall value are diminished by several significant defects. The text contains multitudes of punctuation goofs, mistaken or misleading word choices, and other basic typographical errors that any competent copy editor should catch on the first reading. Sears, obviously an experienced Navy man, throws many acronyms and other jargon into his narratives, often neglecting to define them at first use. A glossary explains many of these terms, but the requirement to consult it so frequently detracts from the flow of reading.
A more serious weakness is the inconsistency of both fact and commentary in Sears' attempts to frame his battle reports with summaries of the major events in the tide of war in the Pacific. The frustrating thing is that he does a marvelous job of introducing many of the pivotal battles and decisions in a way that even the least knowledgeable of readers can understand. But, probably in an effort to remain concise, in some places he omits or skews facts to the extent that those same neophyte readers may come away with misconceptions that might never be corrected. For instance, the Battle of Midway is dismissed in a paragraph without any indication of the crucial role of this engagement in shaping the rest of the Pacific air war. Sears' description of the SBD Dauntless dive bomber not only misspells its designation as SPD, but confuses it with its predecessor, the SB2U-3 Vindicator, mistakenly bestowing the latter's unfortunate nickname of "wind indicator" on the far more airworthy Dauntless. The universally respected Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher receives short shrift throughout the book, coming across to any uninitiated reader as a hesitant, obstructionist figure mainly responsible for losing carriers Lexington (CV-2) and Yorktown (CV-5) and serving more as an obstacle than a competent leader at Guadalcanal. (Sears probably picked up his negative view of Fletcher from Samuel Eliot Morison, who had been offended by the publicity-shy admiral's refusal to cooperate with his naval history research.)
One of the more ironic gaps is Sears' failure to provide any detail in mentioning the gallant sacrifice of the American ships of Taffy 3 during the Battle Off Samar in October 1944. As described by James Hornfischer in his excellent book The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors: The Extraordinary World War II Story of the U.S. Navy's Finest Hour, destroyer Johnston and destroyer escort Samuel B. Roberts charged the battleships and heavy cruisers of Admiral Korita's armada at point-blank range with such ferocity that the Japanese fled in disarray, thereby sparing the Leyte landings from probable disruption. In the face of certain destruction, USS Johnston executed not one but two attack runs, the second after the ship had already been riddled with shells and many of the crew were dead. This heroism presents such an obvious parallel to the deliberately suicidal behavior of the kamikazes that its omission is incomprehensible in a book of this level of detail, particularly since Sears himself is a former destroyer officer. On the other side of the conflict, Japan's long-standing traditions of death with honor and respect for suicide receive little attention, and there's no mention of the naval officer generally credited with drawing up the first plan for a Special Attack Corps, Lt. Comm. Jo Eiichiro, whose samurai heritage undoubtedly spawned the concept.
I think the most damaging lapse is the book's denouement without a thorough treatment of the potential for catastrophe inherent in a land invasion of the Japanese home islands. After sprinkling numerous implied comparisons of damage caused by kamikazes in outlying areas with a presumably vastly greater toll to be inflicted during the final battle, Sears ends his account with only a cursory mention of the atomic bombs and a few anecdotes illustrating the joys (and problems) meeting homecoming sailors and airmen after the war. In light of Sears' diligence in research and access to original databases and first-hand sources, it seems likely that he should be able to contribute significantly to the ongoing discussion of hypothetical losses due to suicide attacks that purport to justify the use of the atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Appendices listing ships and crew victimized by kamikazes are limited to those personally researched by Sears. Hundreds more were targeted by suicide planes, and their story remains to be documented by a more complete, if perhaps less graphic, chronicle. Although this is an outstanding record of the ghastly effects of many individual suicide attacks, it cannot stand alone as a history and analysis of suicide missions in general, their significance in the overall war picture, or their lasting effects on victims from both sides.


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A Main Selection of the Military Book Club and a Featured Alternate of the History Book ClubIn the last days of World War II, a new and baffling weapon terrorized the United States Navy in the Pacific. To the sailors who learned to fear them, the body-crashing warriors of Japan were known as suiciders; among the Japanese, they were named for a divine wind that once saved the home islands from invasion: kamikaze. Told from the perspective of the men who endured this horrifying tactic, At War with the Wind is the first book to recount in nail-biting detail what it was like to experience an attack by Japanese kamikazes. David Sears, acclaimed author of The Last Epic Naval Battle, draws on personal interviews and unprecedented research to create a narrative of war that is stunning in its vivid re-creations. Born of desperation in the face of overwhelming material superiority, suicide attacks by aircraft, submarines, small boats, and even manned rocket-boosted gliders were capable of inflicting catastrophic damage, testing the resolve of officers and sailors as never before. Sears s gripping account focuses on the vessels whose crews experienced the full range of the kamikaze nightmare. From carrier USS St. Lo, the first U.S. Navy vessel sunk by an orchestrated kamikaze attack, to USS Henrico, a transport ship that survived the landings at Normandy only to be sent to the Pacific and struck by suicide planes off Okinawa, and USS Mannert L. Abele, the only vessel sunk by a rocket-boosted piloted glider during the war, these unforgettable stories reveal, as never before, one of the most horrifying and misunderstood chapters of World War II. This is the candid story of a war within a war a relentless series of furious and violent engagements pitting men determined to die against men determined to live. Its echoes resonate hauntingly at a time of global conflict, when suicide as a weapon remains a perplexing and terrifying reality. November 1, 1945 Leyte Gulf The destroyer Killen (DD-593) was besieged, shooting down four planes, but taking a bomb hit from a fifth. Pharmacist mate Ray Cloud, watching from the fantail, saw the plane a sleek twin-engine Frances fighter-bomber swoop in low across the port side. As its pilot released his bomb, Cloud said to himself, He dropped it too soon, and then watched as the plane roared by pursued and chewed up by fire from Killen's 40- and 20-mm guns. The bomb hit the water, skipped once and then penetrated Killen's port side hull forward, exploding between the #2 and #3 magazines. The blast tore a gaping hole in Killen's side and water poured in. By the time Donice Copeland, eighteen, a radar petty officer, emerged on deck from the radar shack, the ship's bow was practically submerged and the ship itself was nearly dead in the water. Practically all the casualties were awash below decks. Two unwounded sailors, trapped below in the ship's emergency generator room, soon drowned. The final tally of dead eventually climbed to fifteen.

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The Grand Fleet, 1914-1916: Its Creation, Development, and Work Review

The Grand Fleet, 1914-1916: Its Creation, Development, and Work
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Very fortunate to find this book as it is well out of print. Well satisfied with purchase

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This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923.This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process.We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide.We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Ironclad: The Epic Battle, Calamitous Loss, and Historic Recovery of the USS Monitor Review

Ironclad: The Epic Battle, Calamitous Loss, and Historic Recovery of the USS Monitor
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Warning; once you start this book cancel your other plans. This is definitely a cover to cover read. Clancy skillfully weaves the tale of Monitor from its conception to the Battle of Hampton Roads, through its untimely demise to its remarkable recovery. His approach it unusual in that he weaves the two tales of the 19th century Monitor against the drama of the recovery of the ironclad's turret.
While Clancy is admittedly not an engineer he is an accomplished sailor with a sense of history. He draws extensively on this knowledge to explain the Battle of Hampton Roads, why the ironclad sunk and how it was recovered (not salvaged). His descriptions of the rising seas and pending storm off Cape Hatteras and how the 19th century sailors judged the weather gave one an insight as to why this area is known as the Graveyard of the Atlantic.
Equally as insightful is the story of the recovery which was woven directly in with the history. This part too is a tribute to brave and dedicated sailors and archeologists whose willingness to commit everything to the task made you race through one chapter if for no other reason than to find out how the "other" story was unfolding.
It's a masterful book, full of information well told. Look out Tom, there's another Clancy on the radar screen.


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The true story of the Civil War ironclad that saved the Union Navy only to sink in a storm--and its remarkable salvage 140 years later

Ironclad tells the saga of the warship USS Monitor and its salvage, one of the most complex and dangerous in history. The Monitor is followed through its maiden voyage from New York to Hampton Roads, its battle with the Merrimack, and its loss off Cape Hatteras. At the same time, author Paul Clancy takes readers behind the scenes of an improbable collaboration between navy divers and cautious archaeologists working 240 feet deep.

Clancy creates a memorable, fascinating read, including fresh insights into the sinking of the Union ship and giving the answer to an intriguing forensic mystery: the identities of the two sailors whose bones were found in the Monitor's recovered turret.


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They fought for the Union Review

They fought for the Union
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I purchased this book as a young man when it first came out. Needless-to-say I fell in love with it. Subsequently I read every book that the late Dr. Lord wrote. This is probably his finest work when he was at the top of his form. It is nice to see it reprinted. Every Civil War shelf should have a copy sitting on it. A very enjoyable read, and fun to pick up and just flip through sometimes.

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Through Fire and Water Review

Through Fire and Water
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Higgitt's book is an account of the ship HMS Ardent during the Falkland's War. He draws heavily on primary sources - letters, diaries and interviews carried out by himself. He shows with great clarity and sensitivity the experience of the young sailors who were given insufficient resources to fight and defend their ship. It is a book about heroes, but is without hype. It is a book that shows Whitehall what they demand of boys scarcely out of school, and damns them for their indifference. I am sure that this work will be a standard text for all who are interested in the Falklands War and how it was fought, the author should be commended for preserving this story.

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The average age of the 199 men on board the HMS Ardent was 23 in May 1982 when she made a midnight run into Falkland Sound, ahead of the British amphibious group. This text tells the story of the frigate Ardent, from Christmas 1981 in Amsterdam to her sinking in Falkland Sound - and beyond.

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Gold Wings, Blue Sea Review

Gold Wings, Blue Sea
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Great story on one man's journey through Naval Aviation from Pensacola to flying AD-1's in the fleet.

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Seapower and Space: From the Dawn of the Missile Age to Net-Centric Warfare Review

Seapower and Space: From the Dawn of the Missile Age to Net-Centric Warfare
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I wasn't too disappointed in this book only because I expected little. It plays to Friedman's weaknesses rather than his strengths, and as a result a great deal of it is simply wrong. It's inevitable when you try as a total outsider to write about what is inherently an insider's subject, where there are few public sources and a fair portion of those that do exist were deliberately cooked to give misleading impressions. Its main utility is as a source of things like the dates of Congressional action. Don't rely on it for much else.

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Access to space-based systems has radically changed naval warfare over the past three decades, yet until now no book has described what has happened. Space systems began as an essential support for strategic missiles such as Polaris. Now they form the basis for net-centric warfare. The current revolution in military affairs is largely an extension of the space-based naval warfare concepts developed since the late 1970s. It began with over-the-horizon missile targeting and then evolved to the outer air battle of the 1980s and to current concepts of littoral and deep-strike warfare. This is the first study to go beyond the usual descriptions of space-based navigational and communications systems to describe surveillance and targeting systems and tactics, both offensive and defensive, as they evolved in the U.S. and the old Soviet navies. It also examines likely future developments, including the impact of the new civilian imaging satellites, the pressure to shift from military to civilian-owned communications systems, and the potential for anti-satellite weapons. This book looks at past attempts at and the likely potential of space-based anti-submarine warfare.Until recently, the secrecy surrounding many naval space systems has precluded any account of their significance, or indeed of the way in which they are changing naval warfare. Now enough information has been declassified or has become available with the collapse of the Soviet Union to make such a book possible. Norman Friedman evaluates the significance of space technology to the western alliance, the impact of the United States' near-monopoly of space assets, and the attempts by other nations to develop their own alternatives.--This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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The Design and Construction of British Warships 1939-1945: The Official Records : Submarines, Escorts and Coastal Forces (Vol. 2 of a 3 Vol. Set) Review

The Design and Construction of British Warships 1939-1945: The Official Records : Submarines, Escorts and Coastal Forces (Vol. 2 of a 3 Vol. Set)
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IN A NUTSHELL: VERY CONCISE & YET COMPREHENSIVE
At the end of World War 2, the 'Director of Naval Construction' had the teams involved with the design and development of England's wartime navy create a detailed chronicle of their wartime activities [1939-1945]. That chronicle has been drafted into this 3 volume text, with editorial footnotes, insights, and some line drawings from David Brown, a retired Deputy Chief Naval Architect. The result is this second of a 3 volume series which altogether equals a kind-of concise anatomy of the British Navy during World War 2.

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MUSSOLINI'S WAR: Fascist Italy's Military Struggles from Africa and Western Europe to the Mediterranean and Soviet Union 1935-45 Review

MUSSOLINI'S WAR: Fascist Italy's Military Struggles from Africa and Western Europe to the Mediterranean and Soviet Union 1935-45
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My friends and I were somewhat mystified by the vehemence of criticism "Mussolini's War" has drawn from some amazon reviewers. We are all history buffs, do a lot of reading about World War Two especially, and were attracted to this title, because there are so few others of this genre (besides technical and political accounts) in English. Each one of us was left breathless by this book's fast pace and vast scope. It provides a unique over-view of the Second World War written in clear prose, but filled with innumerable details, as compelling as they were new to us.
"Mussolini's War" reads very much like a huge epic, with individual heroes and villains acting against the backdrop of a global conflagration. The Duce himself turns out to be a far more complex character than the two-dimensional bully caricaturized by mainstream historians. In a nutshell, what makes this book different from all the rest are Italy's numerous, previously unrecognized military triumphs and technological advances described nowhere else. For the first time, we learn about Mussolini's atomic bomb project, the triumph of his Mediterranean fleet over Britain's Royal Navy, his jet planes, routing the Americans on Sicily and in northern Italy, trouncing the Soviets in Russia with history's last cavalry charge, sinking U.S. freighters off Brazil, wiping out British battleships in one blow at Alexandria, saving Rommel's Afrika Korps in Libya, a round-trip counter-espionage mission from Rome to Tokyo, and much, much more material that is shocking to learn for its newness.
In short, "Mussolini's War" is a kind of lost history that radically revises preconceptions held about him for nearly seventy years. Perhaps that explains the hostility of conventional historians, who have their own, set view of things; a perspective that gives them comfort they feel needs defending.
Revealingly, one of the hostile amazon reviewers admits he is himself a published writer on the subject. His and his fellow critics attempt to savage "Mussolini's War", while ignoring its profusely documented research. They resort to arguing over armament disparities (which appear to arise from different sources) and other, relatively insignificant details. The skeptics insist Joseph made up his book out of sheer fantasy. If so, how can they account for his hundreds of footnotes and long list of source materials?
These are quibbles aimed at disparaging the far more significant story he offers. Should we have allowed such mean-spirited carping to make us pass over this book, we would have been cheated out of reading the most thorough, eye-opening and dramatic re-telling of World War Two from the Italian perspective in print.


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A sailor's log;: Recollections of forty years of naval life, Review

A sailor's log;: Recollections of forty years of naval life,
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"A Sailor's Log: Recollections of Forty Years of Naval Life", is an excellent book that chronicles the life of Rear Admiral Robley Evans, known in his time as "Fighting Bob". The book fully covers a long past era of the United States Navy, reaching from the Civil War to the very early 1900's. The description of the way in which early Naval officers were selected and trained is fascinating, and the comparisons that can be drawn between Admiral Evans's detailed life in the Navy and today's contemporary fleet give one much to think on. "A Sailor's Log" is a stimulating, nostalgic, and thought-provoking book, running the gamut from high seas adventure to the placement of the first African-American in the Naval Academy.

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This book is a facsimile reprint and may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages.--This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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The Honored Dead (The Honor Series) Review

The Honored Dead (The Honor Series)
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Four stars, down from five in the early series. Peter Wake started out as an ernest young naval officer trying to blockade rebels on the western Florida coast during the civil war. Now six books later after fighting African slavers, advising the French building the Panama Canal and chasing evil doers through the Caribbean, he has morphed into an intelligence officer with high connections to the US President, the Pope and such. We learn some history of southeast Asia in the 1880's but Peter seems mostly along for the ride, somewhat incidental to the story. I wish the talented Mr. Macomber would return to his Florida roots and explore the history of post Civil War Florida with different characters if need be (though I guess Sean, his son, who we know to be destined for the admiralty will soon appear). The appearance of the Yard Dogs in the last chapter is an "in" joke but must seem strange to those not in the know.

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The award-winning Honor series continues with this fast-paced thriller as, amidst exotic beauty and palace intrigue in 1883 French Indochina, U.S. naval intelligence officer Peter Wake is thrust into international events.

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