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Rating: Summary: A Book for Everyone Review: The Bloodstained Sea is a book for three kinds of people: those who know (or think they know) about the Battle of the North Atlantic, those who don't, and those who were there. The readers in the first two categories (I fall into the first) are in for an eye-opening ride on rough seas. I thought I knew. I was mistaken. Those unfamiliar with this part of our history will find a fast-paced story of heroic actions that could be fiction. But it isn't. I do remember tar and oil on the beaches but I never knew how bloody it was. Now I do.
These men battled U-boat wolf packs hunting through the convoys. They also endured bone-chilling cold and mind-numbing fatigue and this went on day after day and week after week with little respite. Only the brave and the selfless can do this.
Mr. Walling has done a superb job of telling their story. Extensive research using original sources such as ships' logs, interviews with veterans of the action, and his Coast Guard experience add to the authenticity of this book.
For the third group, those who were there, Bloodstained Sea is a well-deserved, long-overdue tribute to their gallantry. While we can only marvel at such dedication to duty, they can read it and say, "Yes, that's how it was."
This is a five-star book.
Rating: Summary: Who says history is dull? Review: This book is amazing. I haven't even finished it yet and I'm excited to tell other people about it!It chronicles the history of the Coast Guard during WWII in the North Atlantic ocean. There are some great stories told by veterans. We hear about Coast Guard cutters that encouter the German battleship, Bismarck and observe the exchange between the HMS Hood and Bismarck. Other CG Cutters transport Royal Marines to the shores of Greenland to hold-off Nazi sympathizers from Denmark and Norway from establishing weather and communication stations. The book opens up a whole new history to the role the Coast Guard has played in our nation's past. Many people are completely clueless regarding most of the events recorded in this book. It is a very important book, and has increased my respect for the Coast Guard immensely. Very well done.
Rating: Summary: Fascinating history. Review: This book is amazing. I haven't even finished it yet and I'm excited to tell other people about it! It chronicles the history of the Coast Guard during WWII in the North Atlantic ocean. There are some great stories told by veterans. We hear about Coast Guard cutters that encouter the German battleship, Bismarck and observe the exchange between the HMS Hood and Bismarck. Other CG Cutters transport Royal Marines to the shores of Greenland to hold-off Nazi sympathizers from Denmark and Norway from establishing weather and communication stations. The book opens up a whole new history to the role the Coast Guard has played in our nation's past. Many people are completely clueless regarding most of the events recorded in this book. It is a very important book, and has increased my respect for the Coast Guard immensely. Very well done.
Rating: Summary: Who says history is dull? Review: This is an exciting, entertaining and informative book. The story of the U.S. Coast Guard in World War II deserves to be remembered and Mr. Walling tells it in a historically accurate, but vivid and enthralling manner. Thoroughly documented and backed with extensive primary source research and interviews, "Bloodstained Sea" demonstrates that the WW2 veterans of the Coast Guard should be ranked high in America's pantheon of heroes. Everyone interested in military or maritime history should own this book.
Rating: Summary: Muddy Water Sailors at War Review: When the courageous warriors of WWII are named, those of the Coast Guard who protected the vital life line convoys across the North Atlantic stand among the foremost, and this wonderful book gives them their long overdue tribute. Author Walling spent 17 years of exhaustive and productive research to interview those who fought both the Germans and mother nature in a no-holds-barred struggle of gigantic proportions, a contest in which the losers faced death in a number of horrible ways. The Coast Guard and its seven 327 foot Secretary Class cutters took on the toughest of sea and combat conditions alongside the navies of our allies against the toughest and most determined of Hitler's many weapons, the submarine. The author has given a very human face to the horrors these antagonists faced as oil tankers blew up, vessels broke apart in heavy seas, sometimes without the slightest warning, and brave young men risked their lives to rescue the mariners from flimsy boats and rafts while dodging enemy torpedoes. The grim realities of this kind of warfare, never glamorous, but absolutely essential in the grand scheme of the Allied effort to defeat a determined enemy, come alive though the stories of those who were there and survived. The ships themselves become central figures in this drama and their toughness and efficiency are matched only by that of their valiant crews as they face uncertainty and danger. Six appendixes provide excellent background on Coast Guard vessels and history to help the reader understand the infrastructure prior to and in support of the war effort. This book stands as the definitive work on what the Coast Guard achieved when called to serve and is an absolute "must read" for all those interested in the Battle of the Atlantic.
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