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The Depths of December: The Sinking of HMS Repulse, Prince of Wales ... and the British Empire.

Posted By: Free butterfly
The Depths of December: The Sinking of HMS Repulse, Prince of Wales ... and the British Empire.

The Depths of December: The Sinking of HMS Repulse, Prince of Wales … and the British Empire. by Stuart Lloyd
English | April 18, 2022 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B09Y8QJFM8 | 73 pages | MOBI | 1.37 Mb

The Depths of December is a short and punchy treatment on one of the most pivotal battles in WW2: when the British Far East Fleet fond itself pitted against the Mitsubishi Bombers of the 22nd Flotilla Imperial Japanese Air Service.
For years Britain and Japan had followed different strategies for warfare. ‘Big Guns’ for the former, ‘Air Strike Power’ for the latter. And on 10 December 1941 — just a few days after Pearl Harbour — it was proof of concept time.
The Depths of December is classic Stuart Lloyd storytelling (‘the perfect storyteller’ according to The Telegraph UK) because he uses first-person quotes from those in the thick of the battle action to drive the narrative along.
We get a ringside seat in the waters off Kuantan, Malaya. For example:
“The vibration and speed of Repulse was truly unbelievable,” said said Seaman Matthews. ”Our skipper had us falling over everywhere in his attempt to comb the incoming torpedoes … I began to notice that the bombers were starting to fly directly overhead after they’d dropped their torpedoes. It was as if they were taunting us. I could even see the pilots’ faces quite clearly.”
Ian Hay was part of this frantic action, ordered to dash between ready-ammunition storage areas and the exposed gun mounts as an ammunition bearer. “The run back along the deck was terrifying. It had now claimed the lives of three of our delivery party, all by machine gun fire. It was like playing some crazy game of dare.”
Australian Midshipman Guy Griffiths was just 18, having joined the RAN as a 13-year-old Cadet. He now squirmed out of a porthole of the ship he’d joined for further training just nine months earlier, he told me. “Then, the dear old ship, you could feel her going down … like standing in the bath with the plug out as the water came in.”
Despite Iwasaki’s own plane having its left wing on fire, they headed back to base in Saigon. “The radio kept updating us on the situation. ‘Repulse completely underwater.’ We all shouted ‘Banzai!’ in the airplane when we heard the good news.” Iwasaki landed safely moments before his left wing burned down to nothing.
Praise for Stu Lloyd’s military history writing comes from very high quarters indeed:
'We are in the hands of a truly professional wordsmith … I am lost for words.' – Rear Admiral (ret’d) Ian Richards, Royal Australian Navy.

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