Admiral Andrew Cunningham, best remembered for his courageous
leadership in the Mediterranean in the Second World War, is often
rated as our finest naval commander after Nelson, and indeed a bust of
the Admiral was unveiled in Trafalgar Square close by his predecessor
in 1967 by the Duke of Edinburgh. It was during the dark days of
1940–41, after the surrender of France and Italy’s entry into the
War and when Britain was fighting single-handed, that Cunningham held
the Eastern Mediterranean with a fleet greatly inferior to the
Italian; his lack of ships and aircraft was more than made up for by
his bold and vigorous command. Taranto, Matapan, Crete, North Africa
– these are the critical battles and regions with which he is so
closely associated. A Sailor’s Odyssey is the stirring autobiography
of this great fighting seaman from his boyhood in Dublin and his early
career in the Navy and his service in the First World War, through his
commands in the inter-war years, to the great sea battles in the
Mediterranean, and then his elevation to First Sea Lord in 1943 and
his subsequent responsibility for the operational policy of the Royal
Navy during the later stages of the War. He attended the conferences
at Casablanca, Teheran, Quebec and Yalta, and gives revealing glimpses
of Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin. His was, truly, a remarkable
career. This is a beautifully written and absorbing naval memoir, and
it made a significant contribution to the history of the Royal Navy in
the Second World War when it was first published in 1951; this new
paperback edition, with an introduction by his great nephew Admiral
Jock Slater, will fascinate and delight a new generation of readers
and bring into focus again a great British fighting admiral.
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The Autobiography of Admiral Andrew Cunningham
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781399092982
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Vendor
Seaforth Publishing (ORIM)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter