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Scattered Far and Wide - Mr. Justin Laborde - Bog - Naval Institute Press - Plusbog.dk

Scattered Far and Wide - Mr. Justin Laborde - Bog - Naval Institute Press - Plusbog.dk

The young men who graduated from the Naval Academy in 1938 left Annapolis on the cusp of the twentieth century’s mightiest conflagration and faced its perils around the world while serving on ships, planes, submarines, and even an airship. In the process, these junior officers earned medals and fame, left legacies of heroism and loss, and sparked tales of renown and bravery that reverberate today. Scattered Far and Wide tells the stories of midshipmen from the Class of 1938 who graduated at a historically perilous time, going on to face the trials of combat as new officers in the war’s early days and, in its later years, as ship captains, pilots in leadership positions, and submariners in charge. Tested as young leaders, they bore the new burdens of command while at the fore of the Pacific War’s largest and most pivotal campaigns. They felt the wind and spray in their faces and the percussion of ships’ guns and depth charges, at the perfect moment in their lives and careers to make their experiences unusually compelling, heartbreaking, and—most assuredly—instructive. Their sacrifice was substantial: 42 of the 438 graduates were killed in action. These men were scattered across Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. They struggled for survival as part of the Navy’s Asiatic Fleet, attempting to stem the onslaught of the Imperial Japanese Navy in the war’s early months; were captured and shipped to brutal prisoner-of-war camps; took to the air off aircraft carriers as members of torpedo, bomber, and fighter squadrons during the Battles of the Coral Sea and Midway; and served on submarines in the conflict’s latter stages, enduring some of the most legendary war patrols in the history of the Silent Service. Justin Laborde is a gifted storyteller and uniquely positioned to tell this story. His grandfather, Alden Laborde, was a member of the Class of 1938, and upon his death Justin obtained a 1938 edition of The Lucky Bag , the U.S. Naval Academy yearbook. Perusing the memoirs of Alden’s classmates, Justin realized he was well placed to tell the fascinating and unreported tale of this class’ experiences in World War II. He spent five years gathering primary materials and researching the histories and wartime stories of the Class of ’38’s members. As a result, his book focuses on smaller, more personal, and more relatable experiences than most previous histories of the war and shows the reader these well-known battles and strategic developments through the eyes of young naval officers new to leadership and to combat. Readers will finish this book caring deeply about the fates of the men who were part of the Naval Academy’s Class of 1938.

DKK 244.00
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Give Me a Fast Ship - Thomas J Cutler - Bog - Naval Institute Press - Plusbog.dk

Give Me a Fast Ship - Thomas J Cutler - Bog - Naval Institute Press - Plusbog.dk

The term “hero” is overused today, but the story of Ernest Evans and the crew of USS Johnston (DD 557) during the epic Battle of Leyte Gulf in October 1944 is one of true heroism that may be equaled but never surpassed in the annals of American naval history. Undaunted by a vastly superior Japanese task force bearing down on their ship, Commander Evans’ crew laid down a smoke screen, launched all torpedoes, and opened fire with the main battery of five, 5-inch guns, diverting the Japanese fleet’s attention from the vulnerable escort carriers under their protection. Evans’ courageous leadership earned him a posthumous Medal of Honor, and his indomitable fighting spirit made him a true legend in the U.S. Navy. This inspiring book offers an in-depth look at Evans, the Johnston , and the ship’s crew. Award-winning author Thomas J. Cutler relies heavily on interviews he conducted with surviving crew members, as well as his own experiences while serving as an enlisted man in a similar destroyer. Readers can almost feel the sting of salt spray on their faces as Cutler presents a gripping account of Johnston ’s year of service, from her commissioning to her sinking off Samar in October 1944. Often reading like a novel, this is a fascinating and poignant history of not only the ship and the crew, but of her Native American skipper who—forced to retreat in the early days of the war—fulfilled his commissioning day promise to “never again run from the enemy.” Evans was a 1935 Naval Academy graduate serving as executive officer of the aging destroyer USS Alden in the far-off Asiatic Fleet when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Left virtually behind the lines as the Japanese rampaged their way around the Western Pacific, Alden was among only four U.S. warships to escape in the aftermath of the Battle of the Java Sea in February 1942. Spending the next year in frustratingly mundane operations until given command of the newly built Fletcher-class destroyer Johnston , Evans then led his ship in gunfire missions during island-hopping assaults in the Marshalls, Carolines, and Marianas before Johnston f aced her ultimate challenges in the Philippines. A story for the ages, readers will experience the tedium and the terror of life at sea, the unique challenges of naval combat, and the horrors of trying to survive while adrift in hostile waters. They will know the terrible waste and the agonies of war but will be awed by what human beings can do in the face of great adversity and in the presence of inspirational leadership. The causes for which these men fought and sacrificed have faded with time, the machines they used to carry out their deadly business are now rusted relics of another era, and the waters show no trace of their wakes. But the glory of their deeds will never be forgotten.

DKK 221.00
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