Coast Watching in the Solomon Islands: The Bougainville Reports, December 1941-July 1943
By (Author) A. B. Feuer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st May 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
Second World War
Modern warfare
War and defence operations
940.54
Hardback
208
This story of the Solomon Island coast watchers - Jack Read, Paul Mason, and others - recounts one of the most successful intelligence operations of World War II. By the time war came to the South Pacific on December 8, 1941, an excellent intra-district communication network had already been established on Bougainville. A daily system of radio reporting was put into effect by Lieutenant Commander Eric Feldt, who noted: "Few realized that when the first waves of United States marines landed on the bitterly contested beaches of Guadalcanal, coast watchers on Bougainville, New Georgia and other islands were sending warning signals of impending Japanese air raids almost two hours before enemy aircraft formations appeared over the island". Japanese shipping and aircraft activity was monitored and news of spottings was telegraphed to Guadalcanal headquarters. Information on shipping was directly responsible for the American victory in November 1942, when 12 Japanese transports, loaded with reinforcements, were intercepted and destroyed. Jack Read summarized his activities as follows: "Reviewing the course of our operations, coast watching on that most northerly peg of the Solomons had fulfilled its mission long before we were driven out - and to a far greater effect than we realized. During the early and uncertain days of the American struggle to wrest Guadalcanal from the Japanese, the reports and timely warnings from Bougainville were directly responsible for the enemy's defeat". Admiral William Halsey praised the work of the coast watchers, and said that Guadalcanal saved the South Pacific. This edited account is the remarkable story of Read, Mason, and other coast watchers and their struggles for survival in the Japanese-patrolled jungles of Bougainville.
Coast Watching in the Solomon Islands overall is a good, entertaining and informative read, perfectly suited for use by historians, students of World War II and anybody fascinated with the ways and means of intelligence. The book is blessed with plenty of maps, an absolute necessity in good military history, and Feuer has produced a very readable text, highlighted by excellent selections.-World War II Magazine
"Coast Watching in the Solomon Islands overall is a good, entertaining and informative read, perfectly suited for use by historians, students of World War II and anybody fascinated with the ways and means of intelligence. The book is blessed with plenty of maps, an absolute necessity in good military history, and Feuer has produced a very readable text, highlighted by excellent selections."-World War II Magazine
A. B. FEUER is a military historian and freelance newspaper and magazine journalist. The author of Bilibid Diary: The Secret Notebooks of Commander Thomas Hayes (1987) and Combat Diary: Episodes from the History of the Twenty-Second Regiment, 1866-1905 (Praeger, 1991), he has also published articles in numerous journals, including Military History Magazine, Sea Classics, Civil War Quarterly, and World War II and is a book reviewer for Military Review.