New Guinea 194243: Halting the last Japanese advance
By (Author) Mark Stille
By (author) John Rogers
Illustrated by Jim Laurier
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
6th January 2026
25th September 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Air forces and warfare
Battles / military campaigns
Paperback
96
Width 184mm, Height 248mm
Lavishly illustrated, this book studies the role of airpower in the New Guinea battles of 194243, as the Allies checked and halted Japan's last significant offensives.
Mark Stille and John Rogers offer a new history of a previously neglected part of the South Pacific air war - the battles over New Guinea and the waters around it. The first of two books on the subject, drawing on Japanese, American and Australian sources, it details operations from February 1942 until April 1943, which saw the Allies stop the last Japanese efforts to expand their faltering empire.
Allied air operations focused on denying the Japanese the use of the sea to send reinforcements to New Guinea, during the battles for Buna and Gona, the unsuccessful and little-known Japanese invasion at Milne Bay, and the Battle of the Bismarck Sea in which a major Japanese effort to move troops to New Guinea was crushed by air power. While the Japanese had over-extended and lost operational focus, the Allies were successful in interdicting sea movement of Japanese forces to New Guinea. However, immature tactics meant air power was largely ineffective supporting their ground campaign.
Packed with photos, superb original battlescenes, 3D diagrams and maps, this book explains the roles of Japanese and Allied air power in the crucial battle of New Guinea.
Mark Stille is the author of numerous books on the Pacific War. He recently concluded a nearly 40-year career in intelligence, including tours on the faculty of the Naval War College, on the Joint Staff, and on US Navy ships.
John Rogers is a retired US Navy captain who saw operational service in the Mediterranean and Southwest Asia. He is also a retired senior intelligence analyst with the DoD.
Jim Laurier is a renowned aviation artist with paintings on permanent display at the Pentagon.