Wartime Glimpses into the Silent Service

On June 23, 1943, the Norfolk Ledger-Star published a rare look into one of the most secretive corners of the American war effort. Titled “Submarine Crews Submerge, Sweat, When Depth Charges Are Dropped,” the article gave readers at home a dramatic, carefully curated peek into life aboard a U.S. Navy submarine during World War II. For a service built entirely on secrecy, it was a surprising choice.

The story brings readers just close enough to the action. It describes the chaos and claustrophobia of a depth charge attack. The lights go out. The sub tilts and groans. Officers calculate courses, speeds, and firing angles in tense silence. Crewmembers hold their breath, literally and figuratively, as enemy destroyers hunt above them. And all of this unfolds without giving up a single operational detail.

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USS Golet SS-361

She slipped away from Midway on May 28, 1944, her steel hull slicing through the Pacific with quiet determination. Her crew, 82 strong, knew their mission and accepted the risks. They had trained, bonded, and believed in the purpose that had brought them to this point. The boat was USS Golet, SS-361, a Gato-class submarine barely six months into her career. No one who waved her off that day could know they were saying goodbye forever.

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Submarine!

If Herman Melville had served aboard the USS Triton, he might’ve written Submarine! instead of Moby-Dick. But as fate would have it, that task fell to Edward L. Beach, a decorated U.S. Navy submarine officer and later the author of the bestselling novel Run Silent, Run Deep. In Submarine!, Beach doesn’t just tell sea stories. He opens the watertight doors of a secret world, inviting us into the steel bellies of America’s undersea fleet during World War II.

What makes Submarine! unique is its blend of firsthand memoir and composite storytelling. Rather than write strictly about his own missions, Beach gathers real-life experiences from several submarines—Trigger, Wahoo, Harder, Tang, and others—blending them into a chronological, unified narrative of the Pacific submarine campaign. The result is a thrilling, authentic, and highly readable account of a silent war fought beneath the waves.

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