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Whispering Death

Whispering Death 1

Australian Airmen in the Pacific War

by Mark Johnston
Paperback
Age range: 0 to 0 years old Publication Date: 01/08/2011
4/5 Rating 1 Review

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$33.25
In Whispering Death, Mark Johnston, one of Australia's leading experts on World War II, explains vividly how more than 130,000 Australian airmen fought Japan from the Pacific War's first hours in 1941 to its last in 1945. They clashed over a vast area, from India to Noumea, Bass Strait to the Philippines. Merely flying over that region's boundless oceans and wild weather was dangerous enough for Australia's fliers, but their formidable enemies made it much more perilous. In their Zero fighters and Betty bombers they were initially too numerous, experienced and well-armed for the few Australians who opposed them in Malaya, the Northern Territory and New Guinea. February 1942 brought the RAAF its darkest hour: the bombing of Darwin, which no Australian fighter planes contested. But in the months following, Australian aircrew won or contributed to great aerial victories in the air over Port Moresby, Milne Bay, the Papuan beachheads and the Bismarck Sea. The American air force grew to dominate both the Japanese and their Australian ally, but until war's end Australian aircrew continued to battle in Pacific skies, and to die in flaming aircraft or at the hands of vindictive captors.
Some pilots, such as aces Clive 'Killer' Caldwell and Keith 'Bluey' Truscott became household names. Certain Australian aircraft caught the public imagination too: the Kittyhawk, the Spitfire and the plane dubbed 'Whispering Death' for its eviscerating firepower and deceptively quiet engines - the Beaufighter. Australia's flight to victory was never smooth, thanks to internal squabbling at the RAAF's highest levels and a difficult relationship with the allies on whom Australia depended for aircraft and leadership. So controversial were the RAAF's final operations that some of its most prominent pilots mutinied. Based on thousands of official and private documents, Whispering Death makes for compelling reading.
ISBN:
9781741759013
9781741759013
Category:
Air forces & warfare
Age range:
0 to 0 years old
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
01-08-2011
Language:
English
Publisher:
ALLEN & UNWIN
Country of origin:
Australia
Pages:
536
Dimensions (mm):
230x152.4x36mm
Weight:
1kg
Mark Johnston

Dr Mark Johnston is Head of the History Department at Scotch College, Melbourne, Victoria. Mark Johnston is one of this country's leading experts on the Australian Army in World War II.

He was described in the Australian War Memorial's Wartime magazine as `the leading historian on the experience of Australian soldiers during the war'. This book, his eleventh, goes to the heart of that wartime experience.

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This is a comprehensive combat history of the RAAF in Asia during WW2, from the time of the Japanese invasion of Malaya until the end of the war. The inadequacies of both available equipment and the upper levels of management are exposed. There are also some deeply disturbing stories of the treatment of downed crews by their Japanese captors.

Contains Spoilers No
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