<< 1 >>
Rating:  Summary: I was there Review: I liked the way Butler filled in the history of the Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth.He also told a very good clear picture of life we lived aboard ship. On page 92 second phargaph tells of a March 1945 crossing . I was on that passage and well remember hearing the depth charges explodimg.I still have my white tag and cabin with number on D deck.To verify my memory I checked my discharge and called our coplit yes he remembered hearing the depth charges. This tolded of the vital roll these two great ships played in winning of the war.Many of these things where new to me and I was there.
Rating:  Summary: Great story about two great ships Review: Most people will know of the Queen Mary and the Queen Elizabeth as a couple of old cruise liners -- many may have stayed at the Hotel Queen Mary in the ship's now permanent home in the waters of California. For a brief time, these ships were converted to military use in World War II to transport troops. On one occasion, the Queen Mary hit the British light cruiser HMS Curacoa, causing the ship to sink with the loss of hundreds of allied soldiers. Daniel Butler is a great historian and storyteller and he makes the wartime history of these two ships come alive. He doesn't start with the day the decision was made to use these cruise ships for military use. He sets the stage and gives the readers an understanding of the years leading to World War II -- not only giving a political and military background, but also telling us what was happening in the shipping industry that led to the construction of these two ships. To me the two most interesting parts of the book came when Butler tells about the most significant event of the Queen Mary's tour of duty (when the Curacoa was cut in two by her), and the most mundane (what it was like for a soldier to be transported on one of the Queens). If there is a weakness, it was here. I wish he could have had more first hand accounts from the surviving veterans who had crossed the ocean on their way to war. But of course, there are fewer and fewer such survivors still with us. Butler wrote this book just in time.
<< 1 >>
|