Excellent book about a German WW1 commercial raider (heavily armed merchant ship aiming for oppositions cargo and transportation convoys) SMS Wolf whose role was downplayed by Allies although ship accomplished something that no ship ever did - stay afloat and execute raids for more than 400 days on the open sea without any base of operations.
Ship roamed every world ocean during 400+ days, executed harbor mining of key Allied ports and attacked commercial freighters and caused loss of over 110000 tons of shipping to the Allies.
Besides the action of the ship itself, which are quite amazing, main topic of the book are the stories of the crew, captured prisoners of war and relations between them.
It is interesting how some things never change.
Censorship on Allied side that wanted to shut down any story about the German auxiliary cruiser operating in the Far East and around Australia and New Zealand by pushing stories about German spies and saboteurs planting bombs on merchant ships caused terrible issues on multiple fronts. First it caused ship losses because standard precautions like encrypting messages and like weren't used thus enabling Wolf to easily attack its prey.
Second it caused hate against Australians and New Zealanders of German origin that had to migrate back to Germany at the end of the war. Unlike Japanese immigrant internship in America during the WW2 I never heard about the internship of citizens of German origin in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa (this one got me truly going what?) and any other British colony/protectorate in the between.
The way Germans were portrayed in Allied media was also a surprise to me. Germans did start the war but level of demonization and representation of Germans as Huns (as in Atilla the Hun's Huns) is truly terrible and awful. Considering this and the way Nazi Germany used the media during WW2 makes me shudder when I think what can demagogues do with modern media in hands (and again it is not like we do not witness the abuse today).
As Wolf captured ship after ship it slowly accumulated large number of prisoners - sailors from almost every part of the world but also passengers, men, women and children. As time passed by this caused issues with food shortages, outbreaks of thousand and one sea-faring disease and general depressing atmosphere on an overcrowded ship in tropical seas with less and less food as time passed by.
It is interesting to see how prisoners made the internal divisions by race (very unflattering view of the Asians that during this pandemic starts to pop up again) and even within the same race (general view that all Scandinavians are German sympathizers). Constant bickering, problems caused by the presence of women among the men living among men for months, captured officers seeking elite prisoner status and better conditions - entire ship was snapshot of the world at the time, with all issues that come with it.
Book goes into detail about those prisoners (like Cameron family) and German officers and crewmen (captain Nerger among them) that wrote about their experiences after the war. We follow prisoners as they try to survive on overcrowded ship in degrading conditions, marvel at the Germans because they behave differently than media represents them and experience constant emotional ups and downs as hopes for being released on any of the many islands get crushed by reality - Germans simply cannot allow their prisoners to inform the Allies of the raider's presence in the area.
On the other hand we follow German officers as they try to control the crew during the highly demanding voyage, crew living in conditions that are little better than the way prisoners live, constantly loading coal from captured ships on a calm and stormy seas, utter despair after year of travel because they do not know if and when will their travel finally end, will they ever see their families, and after hearing rumors about situation in Germany question arises what will they find when they come back home.
Authors write in quite a capturing way. There is not a single surplus page in this book. Story flows very naturally and keeps the reader's attention to the very end.
Final chapters are bitter sweet because at that point reader will be emotionally linked not only to the prisoners but also to the German crew. These chapters describe the fates of all personas in the book, from German crew to the prisoners, and most importantly fate of the SMS Wolf itself. Raider that caused havoc behind enemy lines was downplayed by the Allies because it had to fit the narrative. How can one admit that single ship slipped through so many blockades of Allied forces and made an round-the-globe trip starting from and ending in Kiel, Germany. Raider finally ended its life after a decade of post-war service as a merchant vessel.
Exceptional book for anyone interested in naval history.