Editorial Content for The Restless Wave: A Novel of the United States Navy
Contributors
Reviewer (text)
For many, naval fiction has been a solid source of reading pleasure. C.S. Forester created Horatio Hornblower and multiple tales of the British Navy during the Napoleonic Wars. He also wrote THE AFRICAN QUEEN and more contemporary books set during World War II. Patrick O’Brian has penned numerous epics, also taking place in the Napoleonic era, featuring British captain Jack Aubrey and physician Stephen Maturin. World War II brought readers the great CAINE MUTINY by Herman Wouk. Humphrey Bogart’s Captain Queeg is an iconic, unforgettable film portrayal.
Finally, THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER is a classic with a fairy tale history. It was the first novel published by the Naval Institute Press and became a national bestseller, endorsed by then-President Ronald Reagan. Tom Clancy would produce countless books that combined fiction with technical military information. Before his death in 2013, he wrote 17 bestsellers and sold more than 100 million copies of his books. If you enjoy this genre, you have a new author for your reading enjoyment.
"It is the mix of actual history and a fictional story that makes THE RESTLESS WAVE a captivating and fast-paced novel."
Admiral James Stavridis is a retired U.S. naval officer whose work, THE RESTLESS WAVE, introduces Scott Bradley James, a young naval officer known as the sailor with three first names. Booklovers will discover what has the potential to be an entertaining and informative series. What we have here is a well-accomplished mix of actual events, some fiction and instructive history in a quick-paced novel that leaves readers wondering at the end where the author and characters will go next.
The book opens briefly on December 7, 1941, with Scott awakening on the island of Oahu in the morning hours to what he believes is the sound of American aircraft flying in tight formation. No further explanation of what is happening is necessary. But the backstory of how Scott came to be on the island as a naval officer must be provided before the book can move ahead. Scott is the son of a retired naval quartermaster who would grow up on boats, learning every aspect of the water world. One enticing quality of Stavridis’ writing is how he incorporates real historical figures into his plots. The first of those to make an appearance is Ernest Hemingway chartering the James family fishing boat and influencing young Scott’s future boxing endeavors when a few years later he enters the Naval Academy.
Life at the Naval Academy is thoroughly portrayed on these pages, with graduation being perfectly timed to coincide with the war clouds looming on America’s horizon. Scott as a young naval officer has an almost Zelig-like career that finds his life path crossing with naval heroes William Halsey, Chester Nimitz, Ray Spruance and others too numerous to list. James also finds himself at Pearl Harbor, serving on a carrier as bombers are launched for the Doolittle Raid, and Japanese carriers are attacked during the Battle of Midway. Later, he is assigned to a destroyer at Tassafaronga Point, a naval battle I learned about for the first time. It is the mix of actual history and a fictional story that makes THE RESTLESS WAVE a captivating and fast-paced novel.
The book concludes partway through the Pacific naval war. There are more sea battles to come, and it is certain that Scott Bradley James, having now risen to the rank of Commander, has both personal and naval matters facing him in the future. In the competent writing hands of Admiral James Stavridis, readers can be certain that it will be an interesting voyage.
Teaser
Scott Bradley James arrives in Annapolis, Maryland, as a plebe in the class of 1941 without a terribly good idea why he wants to be a naval officer, other than that his father was a sailor, and he wants to see the world, whatever that means. Scott and his roommate become fast friends, and, after surviving scrapes of their own making, the two fetch up at Pearl Harbor. War is brewing, and their class has graduated early. They have been sent to battle stations. Admiral James Stavridis is an acclaimed novelist, a decorated military leader and a great student of military history. He draws on it all to capture the experience of being storm-tossed by the bloody first years of the Second World War. Scott Bradley James is a talented young officer, but he has a lot to learn. And war will have a lot to teach him.
Promo
Scott Bradley James arrives in Annapolis, Maryland, as a plebe in the class of 1941 without a terribly good idea why he wants to be a naval officer, other than that his father was a sailor, and he wants to see the world, whatever that means. Scott and his roommate become fast friends, and, after surviving scrapes of their own making, the two fetch up at Pearl Harbor. War is brewing, and their class has graduated early. They have been sent to battle stations. Admiral James Stavridis is an acclaimed novelist, a decorated military leader and a great student of military history. He draws on it all to capture the experience of being storm-tossed by the bloody first years of the Second World War. Scott Bradley James is a talented young officer, but he has a lot to learn. And war will have a lot to teach him.
About the Book
From the New York Times bestselling former NATO commander comes a riveting historical novel that charts the coming-of-age of a gifted but immature young naval officer as he is tested in the crucible of World War II in the Pacific.
Scott Bradley James arrives in Annapolis, Maryland, as a plebe in the class of 1941 without a terribly good idea why he wants to be a naval officer, other than that his father was a sailor, and he wants to see the world, whatever that means. Scott and his roommate become fast friends, and, after surviving scrapes of their own making, the two fetch up at Pearl Harbor. War is brewing, and their class has graduated early. They have been sent to battle stations.
Admiral James Stavridis is an acclaimed novelist, a decorated military leader and a great student of military history. He draws on it all to capture the experience of being storm-tossed by the bloody first years of the Second World War. Scott Bradley James is a talented young officer, but he has a lot to learn. And war will have a lot to teach him.
THE RESTLESS WAVE offers a gripping account of the U.S. Navy’s astonishing progress through the first three years of the war in the Pacific --- from Pearl Harbor through to Midway, Guadalcanal, and the Coral Sea. A story of character under pressure in the harshest of proving grounds, it is written with careful fidelity to the truths of war that have made sea stories essential to the art of storytelling since Odysseus.
Audiobook available, read by Marc Cashman