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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The Divine Devilfish

The Honolulu Star-Advertiser ran the story on June 10, 1955. There it was in black and white, plain as day: Commander Stephen S. Mann, U.S. Navy, was taking over Submarine Squadron 72. It might have just been another quiet military personnel notice to most folks reading their morning coffee over the paper, but for the men who served with Mann, it carried the weight of experience and the quiet authority of a man who had faced death and kept his boat afloat.

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There’ll Be a Commotion Down Under The Ocean

With the war over and things finally settled down, US Submarine Veterans began to return to their homes and family. They were still keenly aware of the deep sacrifice the Sub Force had made, and the reasons why so many had died there was still a reluctance to talk about how they had carried out the destruction of the Japanese Empire.

But in newspapers around the country, stories began to appear that gave the public a taste of what the Sub force had been through and what it had accomplished. In Bogalusa, LA, a multi-part series was run, telling the stories of submarine veterans from the area who had served on the USS Ray SS-271.

On June 6, 1946, almost a year after the war had ended, one of these articles appeared. In it were the lyrics to “The Submarine Song,” without attribution or any author listed.

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