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The Wolf

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Wolf

Contributors:

By (Author) Peter Hohnen
By (author) Richard Guilliatt

ISBN:

9781741666250

Publisher:

Random House Australia

Imprint:

William Heinemann Australia

Publication Date:

1st July 2010

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

First World War

Dewey:

940.45943

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

400

Dimensions:

Width 128mm, Height 197mm, Spine 30mm

Weight:

282g

Description

Sent by Germany on a suicide mission to the far side of the world, the warship Wolf was a formidable and ingenious commerce-raider. Her task was to inflict maximum destruction on Allied shipping using all the latest technology of warfare - torpedoes, mines, cannons, smokescreens, wireless receivers, even a seaplane. It was an assignment so secret that she could never pull in to port or transmit any radio signal. In one continual 64,000-mile voyage, the ship caused havoc across three oceans, launched Germany's first direct attacks on Australia and New Zealand and captured over 400 men, women and children. Surviving on fuel and food plundered from other ships, the Wolf became a world in miniature as her 350-strong crew and their prisoners crowded together in an improbable survival story. Drawn from eyewitness accounts, declassified government files and unpublished diaries and correspondence discovered during five years of research, this is the story of the Wolf's voyage, one of the most remarkable but little-known episodes of the First World War. An extraordinary adventure story, The Wolf is also a portrait of a world undergoing profound transformation.

Author Bio

Richard Guilliatt has been a journalist for 30 years. He was a feature writer at The AGE newspaper, before moving to New York in 1986 to work as a freelance writer. His work has appeared in many leading newspapers and magazines, including THE INDEPENDENT, THE SUNDAY TIMES MAGAZINE, THE NEW YORK TIMES and THE LOS ANGELES TIMES. In 2000 he won Australia's highest award for magazine feature writing, the Walkley Award. Peter Hohnen was a partner in a prominent Canberra law firm for 20 years. A commander in the Royal Australian Naval Reserve for two decades, he was posted to Cambridge University in 1999 to study the law of the sea and the laws of armed conflict as a visiting fellow at the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law. He has been an independent legal consultant to the Australian War Memorial in Canberra and has made several contributions to the AUSTRALIAN DICTIONARY OF BIOGRAPHY. His great-uncle, Alexander Ross Ainsworth, was chief engineer aboard the steamship MATUNGA when it was captured by SMS WOLF in August 1917.

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