Submarine Stories: Recollections from the Diesel Boats by US Naval Institute Press Title: Submarine Stories: Recollections from the Diesel Boats

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Manufacturer: US Naval Institute Press
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Submarine Stories: Recollections from the Diesel Boats by US Naval Institute Press

Fantastic gift for a submariner

I purchased this as a gift for a WWII submariner who states he greatly enjoyed it (and some of the others I've purchased in the past he has not praised this highly.)

Some of the stories were those he already knew from attending the yearly subvet conventions. And (restating it simply and briefly) he states that though he'd already heard many of the stories from the mouths of the very men who wrote them, it was still great having it in print.

There are many individual stories from mostly officers but a few others thrown in for good measure. All are interesting and most importantly, well edited for readability without any obvious change of meaning.
Submarine Stories: Recollections from the Diesel Boats by US Naval Institute Press

Product Description

Culled from many never-before-published narratives and oral histories conducted under the auspices of the U.S. Naval Institute, Submarine Stories presents nearly five dozen first-person accounts from men who were involved with gasoline- and diesel-powered submarines during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The story of these boats, their technological evolution and tactical value, is also the story of the men who went to sea in them. The accounts illustrate the human aspects of serving in diesel boats: the training, operations in peacetime and war, liberty exploits, humorous sidelights, and special feelings of bonding and camaraderie that grew among shipmates.

Included here are some familiar names. Slade Cutter, who earned four Navy Crosses as a skipper in World War II, describes the process that made him a capable submariner. Dennis Wilkinson, first skipper of the nuclear-powered Nautilus in the 1950s, tells of being in the first missile-firing submarine in the 1940s. Robert McNitt recalls his experiences as executive officer to Medal of Honor skipper Gene Fluckey. Among the other submariners who present their personal memories are Jerry Beckley, contemplating the possibility of firing nuclear missiles during the 1962 Cuban crisis; Hosey Mays, describing what it was like to be a black man in a boat with a nearly all-white crew; Paul Foster, discussing the sinking a German U-boat in World War I; and Wayne Miller, explaining the enormous satisfaction he felt when he earned his silver dolphins.