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Fifty-Three Days on Starvation Island - The World War II Battle That Saved Marine Corps Aviation (Hardcover)
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Fifty-Three Days on Starvation Island - The World War II Battle That Saved Marine Corps Aviation (Hardcover)
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On August 20, 1942, twelve Marine dive-bombers and nineteen Marine
fighters landed at Guadalcanal. Their mission: defeat the Japanese
navy and prevent it from sending more men and supplies to
"Starvation Island," as Guadalcanal was nicknamed. The Japanese
were turning the remote, jungle-covered mountain in the south
Solomon Islands into an air base from which they could attack the
supply lines between the U.S. and Australia. The night after the
Marines landed and captured the partially completed airfield, the
Imperial Navy launched a surprise night attack on the Allied fleet
offshore, resulting in the worst defeat the U.S. Navy suffered in
the 20th century, which prompted the abandonment of the Marines on
Guadalcanal. The Marines dug in, and waited for help, as those
thirty-one pilots and twelve gunners flew against the Japanese,
shooting down eighty-three planes in less than two months, while
the dive bombers, carried out over thirty attacks on the Japanese
fleet. Fifty-Three Days on Starvation Island follows Major John L.
Smith, a magnetic leader who became America's top fighter ace for
the time; Captain Marian Carl, the Marine Corps' first ace, and one
of the few survivors of his squadron at the Battle of Midway. He
would be shot down and forced to make his way back to base through
twenty-five miles of Japanese-held jungle. And Major Richard
Mangrum, the lawyer-turned-dive-bomber commander whose
inexperienced men wrought havoc on the Japanese Navy. New York
Times bestselling author John R. Bruning depicts the desperate
effort to stop the Japanese long enough for America to muster
reinforcements and turn the tide at Guadalcanal. Not just the story
of an incredible stand on a distant jungle island, Fifty-Three Days
on Starvation Island also explores the consequences of victory to
the men who secured it at a time when America had been at war for
less than a year and its public had yet to fully understand what
that meant. The home front they returned to after their jungle
ordeal was a surreal montage of football games, nightclubs, fine
dining with America's elites, and inside looks at dysfunctional
defense industries more interested in fleecing the government than
properly equipping the military. Bruning tells the story of how one
battle reshaped the Marine Corps and propelled its veterans into
the highest positions of power just in time to lead the service
into a new war in Southeast Asia.
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