Skip to content

Beverly Hills Public Library

Beverly Hills Public Library
Start Over Request Add to My Lists Export Return To Browse Limit/Sort Another Search
   
Limit results to available items
Limited to: Words in the TITLE "ghost ships of Archangel"
Author Geroux, William, author
Title The ghost ships of Archangel : the Arctic voyage that defied the Nazis / William Geroux
Publ&date New York, New York : Viking, [2019]
Rating Rating
book jacket
LOCATION CALL NO. STATUS
 ADULT  940.545 Geroux    AVAILABLE

Details

ISBN 9780525557463 (hardcover)
0525557466 (hardcover)
Descript 337 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Content Prologue. The spinning needle -- The enemy of my enemy -- Hellish green -- Knight's move -- First blood -- Fireworks -- Scattered -- Into the ice -- Novaya Zemlya -- "We three ghosts" -- Arkhangelsk -- The knife-edge -- Reindeer games -- Reckoning
Summary "On the fourth of July, 1942, four Allied ships traversing the Arctic separated from their decimated convoy to head further north into the ice field of the North Pole, seeking safety from Nazi bombers and U-boats in the perilous white maze of ice floes, growlers, and giant bergs. Despite the risks, they had a better chance of survival than the rest of Convoy PQ-17, a fleet of thirty-five cargo ships carrying $1 billion worth of war supplies to the Soviet port of Archangel--the limited help Roosevelt and Churchill extended to Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin to maintain their fragile alliance, even as they avoided joining the fight in Europe while the Eastern Front raged. The high-level politics that put Convoy PQ-17 in the path of the Nazis were far from the minds of the diverse crews aboard their ships. U.S. Navy Ensign Howard Carraway, aboard the SS Troubadour, was a farm boy from South Carolina and one of the many Americans for whom the convoy was to be a first taste of war; aboard the SS Ironclad, Ensign William Carter of the U.S. Navy Reserve had passed up a chance at Harvard Business School to join the Navy Armed Guard. All the while, The Ghost Ships of Archangel turns its focus on Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin, playing diplomatic games that put their ships in peril. The twenty-four-hour Arctic daylight in midsummer gave no respite from bombers, and the Germans wielded the terrifying battleship Tirpitz, nicknamed The Big Bad Wolf. Icebergs were as dangerous as Nazis. As a newly forged alliance was close to dissolving and the remnants of Convoy PQ-17 tried to slip through the Arctic in one piece, the fate of the world hung in the balance"-- Provided by publisher
Note Includes bibliographical references (pages [319]-326) and index
Subject World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations
World War, 1939-1945 -- Arctic Ocean
Naval convoys -- History -- 20th century