The final book in author Eric Hammel's Guadalcanal trilogy covers the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, a series of combined air and sea engagements which took place from November 12-15, 1942.
By mid-November 1942, the Japanese had failed several times to eliminate the American forces on Guadalcanal, coming up short on the land and the surrounding seas. Another push was going to be made in which significant troop reinforcements were to be landed on the island while naval forces bombarded the airfield in the hopes to remove American airpower from the battle. It is the clash between the Japanese bombardment force and an American force combined of two smaller groups of ships which comprises over half the book, providing the reader with a graphic description of not only major ships blasting each other to pieces but of what it was like to be there through the personal recollections of dozens of American sailors. The battle was chaotic and filled with incredibly bravery on both sides, and while the book could have used a couple extra diagrams of ship movements to give a better idea of how the battle played out, author Hammel does a really good job of going ship by ship on the American side and recounting what they went through. Although tactically a Japanese victory, the Americans kept Guadalcanal from being bombarded that night.
Unfortunately for the Americans, the battle didn't affect the approach of the Japanese reinforcements, nor prevent a bombardment of the American airfield the following night by Japanese warships. However, the next day American planes were able to exact some revenge on the Japanese with repeated attacks on the bombardment force and the approaching troop transports.
The final act was another attempt by the Japanese on November 15, 1942, to bombard Guadalcanal and which resulted in the first battleship vs battleship action involving American and Japanese forces. Since the number of ships was smaller than those involved in the action a few nights previous, the narration covers less of the book, but the detail is still just as good. After this battle, the Japanese never seriously attempted to reinforce their troops on Guadalcanal and any further offensive action was predominantly done by the Americans.
I think I enjoyed this book the best of the three in the trilogy as the narrative really just seemed to move at breakneck speed when covering the naval battles. Well worth picking up to complete the trilogy or as a standalone volume.