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Wragg, David. Royal Navy Handbook 1939-1945. Stroud, UK: Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2005
ISBN 0-7509-3937-0
With the release of this RN volume, the Handbook series from Sutton continues to grow. As we've opined in the past, the series remains dogged by somewhat uneven quality, with some titles proving much stronger than others. For example, Wragg's Fleet Air Arm Handbook is one of the better handbooks, partly because the subject is small enough that the author can tightly focus a work of about 260 pages. On the other hand, Wragg's new Royal Navy volume tackles a much larger topic with only about ten more pages.
Chapter 1: The Royal Navy in 1939. 12 pages. An outline of the strength, deployment, and plans for the fleet at the outbreak of war. Chapter 2: No Phoney War at Sea. 10 pages. Operations through the fall of France, including Mers el Kebir. Chapter 3: Battle of the Atlantic. 17 pages. Convoys, u-boats, raiders, and escorts, through the end of the war. Chapter 4: War in the Mediterranean. 15 pages. Including much on Malta. Chapter 5: Fighting the Weather and the Germans. 8 pages. Arctic convoys. Here's an example of how Wragg handles this material:
Best known of the Arctic convoys was the ill-fated PQ17, which had sailed from Hvalfiordur, in Iceland, on 27 June 1942, without a carrier among its escorts, which might have prevented the tragic events that occurred. The key to the disaster was that the German battleship Tirpitz, in the Altenfjord, was observed by the Norwegian resistance preparing to go to sea on 4 July. The Admiralty had been aware that an attack was likely and the convoy was given a heavier escort than usual, but with nothing heavier than the cruisers in the distant escort. Ultra intelligence had revealed that the cruisers Admiral Scheer and Hipper, and possibly the pocket battleship Lutzow, were also in the Altenfjord. Faced with the strong possibility that this powerful force could overwhelm the convoy escorts, the First Sea Lord, Adm Sir Dudley Pound, ordered the convoy to scatter and the escorts to return. This left the thirty-seven ships at the mercy of U-boats and the Luftwaffe; just eleven ships out of the thirty-seven in the convoy reached their destination, with the loss of 153 lives, 2,500 aircraft, 430 tanks and almost 4,000 lorries and other vehicles. Tirpitz had meanwhile remained in harbour, believing that the distant escort had included a battleship. When this was corrected following aerial reconnaissance, she left port with the other ships during the afternoon of 5 July, but returned to her berth when it was clear that the convoy was being destroyed. Chapter 6: Overwhelmed in the Far East. 4 pages. Early stages of the RN war against Japan. Chapter 7: Breaching Fortress Europe. 10 pages. Northwest Africa, Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, South of France, Normandy. Chapter 8: Returning to the East. 9 pages. Late stages of the RN war against Japan. Thus, Wragg utilizes nearly a hundred pages of his book on Royal Navy operations from 1939 through 1945. While a handbook of this nature can certainly benefit from a brief outline of the progress of the war at sea, expending more than a third of the volume on that part of the subject seems excessive. Here's how the author handles the remainder of the book. Chapter 9: The Fleet Air Arm. 5 pages. This recapitulates in much abbreviated fashion Wragg's previous handbook Chapter 10: The Submarine Service. 15 pages. Here's a sample of the author's coverage of submarines:
In between the small U class and the large longer-range T class was the S class, such as Saracen, a handy intermediate-size submarine for a wide range of duties. The S class had a submerged displacement of between 960 and 999 tons, with six torpedo tubes in the bows and one in the stern; either 5in or 4in guns were fitted. Surface speed was just under 15 knots, while submerged the maximum speed was 9 knots, although again this was a 'one hour dash' and 2 knots was more usual for prolonged patrolling. Chapter 11: Coastal Forces. 7 pages. Motor torpedo boats, motor gunboats, minesweepers, and so on. Chapter 12: Recruitment and Training. 7 pages. Chapter 13: Personal and Personnel. 11 pages. Chapter 14: Warships. 45 pages. The largest chunk of the book is devoted to the vessels of the Royal Navy. Starting with battleships, battlecruisers, and aircraft carriers, and ending with corvettes, minesweepers, and monitors, and with much in between, Wragg reviews every class of RN warships active during the war. For each class, the author gives specifications (such as displacement, armament, endurance, complement, maximum speed, etc) and lists each vessel. Most major warships also receive a sentence or two about their wartime service and a note about their fate. Here's an example:
Battlecruisers Although this is already the lengthiest part of the book, this is also the area where Wragg could have added even more detail. A handbook of this nature would benefit greatly from expanded material for each ship, specifying the campaigns in which it served, engagements in which it participated, damage sustained, refits and armament upgrades, eventual fate, etc. The author already provides some of that information for a few capital ships, but expanding it and extending it to as many ships as possible would make this handbook indispensable. Chapter 15: Naval Bases. 5 pages. Some general information about a few bases, but ignoring others (such as Singapore). This is another area where the author could have significantly increased the utility of his book by providing more detail about facilities and wartime expansions and what each base could and couldn't provide for the fleet. Chapter 16: Naval Air Squadrons. 36 pages. Wragg devoted over ninety pages to this topic in The Fleet Air Arm Handbook, and in his concluding chapter here he covers the same territory. Although not as detailed as in the former book, this time Wragg expends a relatively large part of his new volume covering exactly the same subject. For example, compare the entry for 827 Squadron (as quoted in our 2001 review) with the treatment for the same squadron here:
827: Formed with Albacores, 15 September 1940, at Yeovilton, before operating under Coastal Command. In June 1941, was involved in attacks on the battlecruisers, Scharnhorst and Gneisenau. During the raid on Kirkenes on 30 July 1941, it lost half of its aircraft, although one Albacore shot down a Ju87.
By comparison, Wragg gives each RN warship, no matter how important or famous, far, far less text than any air squadron. That contributes to an overall feeling of imbalance, incompleteness, and lack of focus in the book.
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Reviewed 9 October 2005
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