"This is a masterful account of the barbaric last year of the Pacific War, combining original scholarship, engaging prose, excellent historical judgment, and empathy for the soldier, to explain why defeating the Japanese proved so costly--and how American military forces performed so effectively and, in the end, humanely. <i>The Fleet at Flood Tide</i> is, quite simply, popular and scholarly military history at its best."<b>--Victor Davis Hanson, author of <i>Carnage and Culture, </i>senior fellow in classics and military history, The Hoover Institution, Stanford University<br></b><br>"Hornfischer is the dean of World War II naval history . . . [and] has a crafted an impressive and fast-paced narrative. . . . In his capable hands, the story races along like an intense thriller . . . with the powerful prose of a poet. . . . <i>The Fleet at Flood Tide</i> is narrative nonfiction at its finest--a book simply not to be missed."<b>--James M. Scott, Charleston<i> Post and Courier</i></b> <p/>"An impressively lucid account . . . Mr. Hornfischer crisply and satisfyingly sketches all these figures, and his big <i>Iliad</i> contains a hundred smaller ones, as he propels his complex story forward with supple transitions that never leave the reader behind in the details. . . . At the end of his admirable, fascinating book, Mr. Hornfischer makes a strong case that America's failing to use the most terrible weapon yet born would have meant many hundreds of thousands more deaths, theirs and ours alike."<b><i>--The</i> <i>Wall Street Journal </i></b> <p/>"<i>The Fleet at Flood Tide</i> is the definitive work on the latter days of the war in the Pacific, diving deeper and with more passion and eloquence than anything written to date on this crucial and defining moment in the history of the U.S. Navy. Hornfischer brings the brutality of total war to full-throated life, from the trenches and amphibious assaults to the mass suicides of frightened Japanese civilians to the horrific but necessary decision to use the atomic bomb. This book is a ticket to watch hell in full session, and serves at once as an extraordinary memorial to the courageous--and a cautionary note to a world that remains unstable and turbulent today."<b>--Adm. James Stavridis, USN (ret.), former Supreme Allied Commander, NATO, and Dean of The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University</b> <p/>"In his latest masterpiece on the Pacific War, historian James D. Hornfischer explores how the shocking lessons of the 1944 Mariana Islands campaign helped compel the United States to unleash atomic weaponry as the necessary means to quell the Japanese Empire. . . . Rich and scholarly military history with fresh critical analysis . . . <i>The Fleet at Flood Tide</i> is a masterful, fresh account of the latter days of the war in the Pacific that ably expands on the prior offerings of such classic naval historians as Samuel Eliot Morison. In his analysis, Hornfischer offers perspective on world conflict and cautions for humanity that can be pondered far beyond the conclusion of World War II."<b><i>--The</i> <i>Dallas Morning News</i></b>
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