PT 105 (Bluejacket Books) - WWII Navy Patrol Torpedo Boat History Book | Perfect for Military History Enthusiasts & Model Builders
PT 105 (Bluejacket Books) - WWII Navy Patrol Torpedo Boat History Book | Perfect for Military History Enthusiasts & Model Builders

PT 105 (Bluejacket Books) - WWII Navy Patrol Torpedo Boat History Book | Perfect for Military History Enthusiasts & Model Builders

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Description

Admittedly small and vulnerable, PT boats were, nevertheless, fast-the fastest craft on the water during World War II-and Dick Keresey's account of these tough little fighters throws new light on their contributions to the war effort. As captain of PT 105, the author was in the same battle as John F. Kennedy when Kennedy's PT 109 was rammed and sunk. The famous incident, Keresey says, has often been described inaccurately and the PT boat depicted as unreliable and ineffective. This book helps set the record straight by presenting an authentic picture of PT boats that draws on the author's experience at Guadalcanal, New Georgia, Bougainville, and Choiseul Island. Action-filled, his account describes evading night bombers, rescuing coast watchers and downed airmen, setting down Marine scouts behind Japanese lines, engaging in vicious gun battles with Japanese barges and small freighters, and contending with heat, disease, and loneliness. First published in 1996, the book has been hailed for telling an exciting yet fully accurate story.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Author Dick Keresey has written a first-class account of his experiences as a PT boat skipper in WW2; he covers his time from his induction into the US Navy until his eventual posting back home and discharge from the service, where he picked up the threads of his pre-war life and got on with it.This book covers one man's experiences from being in school and the graduating on to the point of getting ready to start a career, when his plans were blinded by a left field intrusion of the greatest world conflict in modern history. I was drawn to his early experiences and 'stumbling' from trying to learn trigonometry and astro-navigation to trying to bring a 50 ton PT boat in and out of a dock...his first attempt rearranged all the paint work and wood craftsmanship of the boat builders...Progressing from the 'early days' of learning about PT boats he was then thrust into the war in the Pacific where he not only had to contend with developing his skills in boatmanship, but added the demands of leadership of the boat's crew and survival in a real live shooting war at a very fast pace. PT boat crews were always at the forefront of the action and had little time to get to learn the intricacies of the 'neighbourhood' they were operating in before they were moved up to another place with fresh dangers and challenges.By the time of his transfer back the the 'States', Dick had done it all, from attacking enemy barges, to rescuing downed airmen to joining a major assault and being responsible for identifying the location of the next set of forward bases for a PT boat squadron and working with the Coast Watchers his last operation was collecting seventy Japanese from out of the water after their ship had been torpedoed. Along the way he was part of the same unit future US president John F. Kennedy was part of and was on the same mission where Kennedy had his boat cut in two on a night operation.I enjoyed this book immensely as it is rich in experiences and illustrates how people rapidly adapt to challenges and dangerous situations in a highly mobile and often changing environment. Often these operations were conducted at night and were at a time when such equipment as Radar were very much an unknown and radios were a still to be improved device.In summary a very well written and enthralling account of PT boats and their operations as well as the human endeavour in a wartime setting. Well worth the read and very rich in detail and narrative. Well done, Dick Keresey!