Reading this brought back memories of the early Clive Cussler books - there are many similarities in plot and hero.
Like Cussler characterisation is minimal - the men are strong/rugged/forceful, the women are beautiful/intelligent and in almost instant (shared) lust - the plot zooms along and, once you accept the completely implausible central concept ... settle down for the ride.
In brief, the Japanese super aircraft carrier Yonaga has emerged from enforced hiding, complete with an elderly crew, 38 years after the end of WWII. And, as the ship moves inevitably, destroying anything in its way, to recreate "a day that will live infamy" there is confusion in American Naval Command - is it a submarine, a land-based attack, or could it be an aircraft carrier?
Meanwhile, the crew of the Yonaga follow the Samurai code and decades of hard training means that, despite their age, they are capable of performing close to peak.
Author Peter Albano served in the U.S. Navy during WWII and it shows - there's a lot of description of weaponry, turbines and airplanes (most of it padding).
There's a lot of references to race that would be considered very non-PC these days. It is important to remember that this was first published in 1983 ... I edited a history magazine for a number of years and one of my main concerns with several writers was the transference of their perceptions onto the people of the past - what happened was wrong but that doesn't mean that it was considered wrong at the time, or even that that majority of people agreed it was wrong - or cared one way or the other. Sorry, just a personal hobbyhorse!
I won't be reading the rest of the nine-book series in the near future, but I did take a quick peek at book two and I was mightily impressed at how Peter Albano overcomes the problem of how a WWII aircraft carrier manages to remain not only relevant but vital in the 1980s.
If you like a fast read with lots of action - give this a shot!