It had been three years since author
Tom Crew received feedback on his book Combat Loaded: Across the Pacific on
the USS Tate when he received a glowing reader letter from Verne P.
Dalton.
"While it's understandable that
'fighting ships' and 'fighting men' get more attention than freighters and
porters, battles can't be waged without logistical support," said Dalton.
"I believe your book gave a sense of that."
Dalton said he also appreciated the
book for its detailed account of both the technical side of the operation and
its intrinsic human component.
"Your descriptions and
explanations and inclusions of photos, maps and charts should give any student
of World War II or 20th Century naval warfare an excellent view of the role an
AKA or other transport ship of this time."
In closing, Dalton
thanked Crew for giving him a glimpse of the life of his father during his
service. For years Dalton wished that someone would write the story of any AKA
so he could speculate what his life aboard ship would have been like, wrote
Dalton.
Crew's book is the first
authoritative history of any of the more than 350 attack transports or attack
cargo ships of World War II, with combat narratives alongside details of daily
life on board the ships of Tranport Squadron 17 during the waning days of World
War II.
For more on Combat
Loaded, click here. (link to book on website)
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