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Carrier Warfare in the Pacific: An Oral History Collection (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight (Paperback))

Carrier Warfare in the Pacific: An Oral History Collection (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight (Paperback))

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A critically important contribution to military studies.
Review: Carrier Warfare In The Pacific: An Oral History Collection is the latest entry in the highly acclaimed "Smithsonian History of Aviation Series" and presents compelling, personal accounts of behind-the-scenes planning and operations for six major carrier-versus-carrier battles during World War II. Included are the actions at Coral Sea, Midway, Eater Solomons, Santa Cruz Island, Philippine Sea, and Leyte Gulf. These detailed eye-witness accounts of aerial exploits and the heroic efforts on the carriers to continue flight operations despite sustaining heavy damages from enemy attack are the stuff of military history and legend. Carrier Warfare In The Pacific is a seminal and critically important contribution to personal, academic and public library military studies collections.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A critically important contribution to military studies.
Review: Carrier Warfare In The Pacific: An Oral History Collection is the latest entry in the highly acclaimed "Smithsonian History of Aviation Series" and presents compelling, personal accounts of behind-the-scenes planning and operations for six major carrier-versus-carrier battles during World War II. Included are the actions at Coral Sea, Midway, Eater Solomons, Santa Cruz Island, Philippine Sea, and Leyte Gulf. These detailed eye-witness accounts of aerial exploits and the heroic efforts on the carriers to continue flight operations despite sustaining heavy damages from enemy attack are the stuff of military history and legend. Carrier Warfare In The Pacific is a seminal and critically important contribution to personal, academic and public library military studies collections.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Smithsonian books never fail
Review: History can be made two ways: interesting and uninteresting. Wooldridge and Connally rank in the former, with flying colours.

The general public often feels that after Pearl Harbor it was just a matter of time before the US Navy beat its Imperial adversary, but there were a great number of trials and tribulations in developing the carrier force into the jackhammer it was in 1944.

The authors have included material from many key players in the drama, who all provide vitally important and extremely interesting information. For example, there is data on the design of carriers, which was constantly enhanced as battle experience became available. There's also a piece of a member of the enlisted crew, who describes life on a carrier in such vivid detail that one is completely taken by his tale. Captains, pilots, crew members, top brass, all get to say their piece in this most interesting book, which is not to be missed by any student of WW2 in the Pacific.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: First hand accounts of history
Review: This book contains 30 personal accounts of the carrier war in the pacific. Some people provide more than one narrative. There are many insights and exciting passages. It was very hard to put down! You really get a sense of the huge quantities of men and machines that were being "thrown" at each other during the campaign.

My favorite section was Roger Bond's account of the British beer rations and the Americans' vast quantities of ice cream, and how each craved the other. That is just one example of the personal details you won't get from a typical historical account.

The only shortcoming of this book is its pictures. The maps are blurry and too few in number. A timeline would have also helped. Finally, I would have like to see some pictures of the equipment described in the narratives. Even better could have been diagrams showing the battle damage described in some of the accounts. Despite these shortcomings, I certainly recommend this book to anybody even slightly interested in what life was like during the WW2 Pacific carrier battles.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: First hand accounts of history
Review: This book contains 30 personal accounts of the carrier war in the pacific. Some people provide more than one narrative. There are many insights and exciting passages. It was very hard to put down! You really get a sense of the huge quantities of men and machines that were being "thrown" at each other during the campaign.

My favorite section was Roger Bond's account of the British beer rations and the Americans' vast quantities of ice cream, and how each craved the other. That is just one example of the personal details you won't get from a typical historical account.

The only shortcoming of this book is its pictures. The maps are blurry and too few in number. A timeline would have also helped. Finally, I would have like to see some pictures of the equipment described in the narratives. Even better could have been diagrams showing the battle damage described in some of the accounts. Despite these shortcomings, I certainly recommend this book to anybody even slightly interested in what life was like during the WW2 Pacific carrier battles.


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