1st Edition

The Pacific Campaign in World War II From Pearl Harbor to Guadalcanal

By William Bruce Johnson Copyright 2006
430 Pages
by Routledge

430 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

432 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This is a fascinating new account of how diplomacy and politics gave way to military strategy and warfare in the Pacific. Presenting previously unpublished photographs, interviews with veterans, newly commissioned maps and new translations of Japanese sources, this book freshly examines the key events in the fight for the Pacific. Detailing the background to the Japanese attack on... Read more

1. The Pacific Background  2. Why Japan Gambled  3. The Last Clear Chance  4. The Long Postmortem  5. The Course of Empire  6. Bataan Through Midway  7. The Counterthrust  8. The First Two Days  9. The Battle of Savo Island  10. Settling In  11. Up Against It  12. A Mixed Picture  13. Courage and Ambivalence  14. Medical Issues  15. The End of the Beginning

Biography

William Bruce Johnson is a New York-based attorney and a professional writer specializing in government policy and its consequences in the middle decades of the twentieth century.

" This is a scholarly yet quite readable account of how military strategy prevailed over diplomacy and politics during the period from Pearl Harbor to victory at Guadalcanal. Analysis of pre-war activities--including considerable misinterpretation of intelligence and opposing intentions by Japan and the United States--is especially interesting."

--Naval Institute Proceedings