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This is the remarkable story of the Tenth Submarine Flotilla and its part in the Second World War in the Mediterranean. In the words of its second commander, Captain George Phillips, between 1940 and 1944, the 'Tenth' "fought the most concentrated submarine battle in history, from the beleaguered island of Malta."
It is a story packed with drama and tragedy but it does have its lighter side. Much of the tale of the 'Tenth' is told in the survivor's own words as well as by those British and Maltese civilians who obstinately fought the battle on shore. Importantly, the Flotilla's commanding officers also contributed to this book.
The author was one of the survivor's. Few could be better placed to write of the "smell of diesel" in the "underwater coffins": the claustrophobia, foul atmosphere; the guts of the British submariner under sub-human conditions; the shattering explosions which plunge 'the boat' into blackness; the makeshift meals - and the comradeship which lasts a lifetime.
Above all it was the rock-like tenacity and staunch courage of the Maltese, which assured the tenth Flotilla of a base from which to operate. Without the age-old partnership between Malta's people and the Royal Navy, British and Allied submarines would never have cut Rommel's lifeline.
The Fighting Tenth is a tense and gripping story and John Wingate's history has already become the definitive work on the subject.
by John Wingate DSC ISBN no 1904381162
14x22 cm 384 pages with 3 maps, 1 diagram and 87 photos
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