Pacific Turning Point: The Solomons Campaign, 1942-1943
By (Author) Charles Koburger
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
10th October 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
Second World War
Modern warfare
War and defence operations
Australasian and Pacific history
940.5426
Hardback
192
In this book, Koburger argues that the many battles that constituted the campaign for the Solomons were the key to victory in the Pacific for the US Navy - not the battle of the Coral Sea or the Battle of Midway. Segments of the campaign - Guadalcanal, New Georgia, and Bougainville have been written about extensively. The descriptions of the naval battles are very realistic. Even in World War II, Koburger argues, the important naval struggles took place in "the narrow seas".
.,."never before has the entire campaign been put together so lucidly and interpreted so well."-The Bull Sheet
.,."this book is outstanding in its lucid, compelling interpretation and condensation. Never has the 1942-43 Northern and Southern Solomons campaign and its major actions - Guadalcanal, New Georgia, Bougainville, and Vella Lavella - been outlined and convincingly analyzed in such succinct form."-WW II Military Journal
...never before has the entire campaign been put together so lucidly and interpreted so well.-The Bull Sheet
...this book is outstanding in its lucid, compelling interpretation and condensation. Never has the 1942-43 Northern and Southern Solomons campaign and its major actions - Guadalcanal, New Georgia, Bougainville, and Vella Lavella - been outlined and convincingly analyzed in such succinct form.-WW II Military Journal
..."never before has the entire campaign been put together so lucidly and interpreted so well."-The Bull Sheet
..."this book is outstanding in its lucid, compelling interpretation and condensation. Never has the 1942-43 Northern and Southern Solomons campaign and its major actions - Guadalcanal, New Georgia, Bougainville, and Vella Lavella - been outlined and convincingly analyzed in such succinct form."-WW II Military Journal
CHARLES W. KOBURGER, JR., retired from the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve with the rank of Captain after 20 years of active duty. He is now an independent consultant in maritime affairs specializing in Coast Guard-related tasks. He has been published many times on both sides of the Atlantic, and has been translated into French.