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"Best Science Writing" features 12 award-winning and compelling
examples of science journalism. Background and perspective for each
of the selected articles is provided through the editor's
commentary, which is based on interviews with the authors. This
anthology offers a variety of styles, methods, and techniques that
work for the science writer.
Ultimately, World War II was the first war won by technology,
but within only a few weeks after the war began, the U.S. Navy
realized its torpedo program was a dismal failure. Submarine
skippers reported that most of their torpedoes were either missing
the targets or failing to explode if they did hit. The United
States had to work fast if it expected to compete with the Japanese
Long Lance, the biggest and fastest torpedo in the world, and
Germany's electric and sonar models. Hellions of the Deep tells the
dramatic story of how Navy planners threw aside the careful
procedures of peacetime science and initiated "radical research"
gathering together the nation's best scientists and engineers in
huge research centers and giving them freedom of experimentation to
create sophisticated weaponry with a single goal--winning the
war.
The largest center for torpedo work was a requisitioned
gymnasium at Harvard University, where the most famous names in
science worked with the best graduate students from all around the
country at the business of war. They had to produce tangible
weapons, to consider production and supply tactics, to take orders
from the military, and, in many cases, also to teach the military
how to use the weapons they developed. World War II grew into a
chess match played by scientists and physicists, and it became the
only war in history to be won by weapons invented during the
conflict.
For this book, Robert Gannon conducted numerous interviews over
a twenty-year period with scientists, engineers, physicists,
submarine skippers, and Navy bureaucrats, all involved in the
development of the advanced weapons technology that won the war.
While the search for new weapons was deadly serious, stretching
imagination and resourcefulness to the limit each day, the need was
obvious: American ships were being blown up daily just outside the
Boston harbor. These oral histories reveal that, in retrospect,
surprising even to those who went through it, the search for the
"hellions of the deep" was, for many, the most exciting period of
their lives.
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