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The Little Giants: U.S. Escort Carriers Against Japan (Bluejacket Books)

audiobook The Little Giants: U.S. Escort Carriers Against Japan (Bluejacket Books) by William T. Y'Blood in History

Description

Cultural Writing. A new and improved translation of the Spanish explorer's chronicle of his journey across a large portion of what is now the United States. De Vaca's journey (1528 - 1536) of hardship and misfortune is one of the most remarkable in the history of the New World and contains many first descriptions of the land and their inhabitants. THE ACCOUNT is of estimable value for students of history an literature; ethnographers; anthropologists; and the general reader. It is the second literary text to be issued by a national project to reconstruct the literary history of Hispanics of the United States.


#1339073 in Books Naval Institute Press 2012-04-15Ingredients: Example IngredientsOriginal language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.05 x 1.28 x 6.10l; 1.68 #File Name: 1557509808488 pages


Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Little giants indeed!By Stone DogWilliam Y'Blood has given us a much needed account of the CVE's or escort carriers of the US Navy in the Pacific during WWII. The class of small carriers was desperately needed not just in the war in the Pacific against Japan; but also played a major role in the Allies' victory in the Battle of the Atlantic versus German U-Boats.This book focuses solely on the war in the Pacific where naval airpower was the decisive weapon in naval combat. In the early part of the Pacific war; the need for carriers was desperate and the decision was made to convert merchant hulls into small carriers. Later; Henry Kaiser; maker of the prolific "Liberty" ships; began building small carriers on those hulls.I think the author covered the career of these small ships well; stressing the difference between the CVE carriers and the "big boys" - the fast; glamorous fleet carriers as well as the types of jobs the escort carriers found themselves in - everything from anti-submarine warfare to transporting replacement aircraft and pilots for the main; fleet carriers to support for invasion fleets specializing in ground attack and even artillery spotting.The author did an excellent job of covering the routine air operations as well as the desperate combat against Japanese air and surface forces. There is a lot of the kind of "action" here that any WWII reader wants: the fighter pilots desperately trying to shoot down there Japanese opponents; the TBM crews bombing enemy positions on land as well as enemy vessels at sea including submarines. Of course; the author shines light on the "jeep" carriers' finest hour in the Battle off Samar when the small escort carriers took on the big guns of Japanese battleships and cruisers.The tales of combat are wonderful to read. Also; I would point out the excellent pictures (sadly; all black white) of the CVE carriers and their aircraft in combat operations. This is a bonus.My criticisms are two-fold: firstly; I would have liked more specifications to know the difference between the various classes of CVE's. Secondly; why were some CVE's armed differently than others even though they were performing the same tasks? It seemed to me that the Chenango and Suwannee type carriers were armed with F6F Hellcat fighters while the Kaiser/Casablanca-class ships had to make do with FM2 Wildcat fighters which were clearly obsolete and seemed to me to be less effective at combat air patrols.In spite of my relatively mild criticisms; I think this is an excellent work on a topic that clearly doesn't get enough "press" - the small; escort carriers of WWII. In an age of budget cuts; could there be a role for the small carrier in the future US Navy? This is an excellent work that is also an enjoyable read. I recommend this book with four stars.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Good book about a sometimes not super exciting missionBy Jonathan MattsonThis was a good book; not as enjoyable as his book covering the escort carriers in the Atlantic; but an enjoyable book still. While the atlantic book had the ongoing struggle against the German Uboats; this book has the flaw there wasn't a central theme like that for the pacific carriers.Instead they were lugging replacement aircraft to the fleet carriers or sailing around the beaches during an amphibious assault to provide close air support planes. To me; it just doesn't make for as interesting subject material as chasing down submarines.When the Philippines are invaded; you do get to see interesting action that is explained by Y'Blood excellently. One thing that stood out to me was how the damage control procedures on the different carriers seemed to make a difference if the carriers survived the invasion or are sitting on the bottom of the ocean surrounding the islands.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Great book!By Scott ReevesOutstanding history of the escort carriers. I've read extensively on WWII history and there were numerous facts and insights I had seen no where else. Great book!

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