A gripping true-life thriller about the first US submarine to sink a Japanese aircraft carrier--and the sub's tragic twist of fate In 1939 off the New England coast, the submarine USS
Squalus accidentally sinks to the bottom of the sea during a training exercise, killing half her crew. Coming to the rescue is the USS
Sculpin, in many ways the
Squalus's twin. As their oxygen supply dwindles, the remaining crew aboard the
Squalus are saved in a time-consuming, white-knuckle operation. Eventually the sunken submarine is raised, repaired, and returned to duty, with a new name: the
Sailfish.
Four years later, on patrol during the darkest days of the Pacific War, the
Sailfish's radarman picks up the tell-tale signs of a Japanese convoy, known by U.S. intelligence to include aircraft carriers, the most formidable of all enemy ships. Never before has an American submarine taken down a carrier--much less in the middle of a typhoon. Immediately, the crewmen swing into action, embarking on a deadly game of cat-and-mouse as this once-dead boat evades enemy cruisers to stalk closer and closer to their prized target. Little do they know that aboard the Japanese carrier are survivors of an attack on the USS
Sculpin, the very boat that saved the
Squalis-turned-
Sailfish back in '39.
Author Stephen L. Moore takes readers inside the nine-hour duel, narrating the action aboard both the
Sailfish and the doomed carrier, where the American POWs fight against all odds to save their own lives before the ship goes down. Employing a wealth of new information, including long-lost survivors' accounts, fresh interviews with the last of the sub's crew, and official patrol reports,
Strike of the Sailfish is the thrilling story of this strange chapter of naval history.