Wake of the Wahoo: The Heroic Story of America's Most Daring WWII Submarine, USS Wahoo
Book Details
Description
Wake of the Wahoo was originally published in 1960 by Forest J. Sterling, a crew-member of the U.S. Navy submarine USS Wahoo (SS-238). Sterling served on the Wahoo for a one-year period in 1942-43, but was fatefully not aboard the ship on her seventh and final wartime mission in the Sea of Japan, when she was sunk with all hands aboard.
The Wahoo was the most successful American submarine in the World War II Pacific Fleet. She was the first to penetrate an enemy harbor and sink a Japanese ship, and was the first to single-handedly destroy an entire convoy. In her 11 short months of life, Wahoo managed an incredible 21 kills, totaling over 60,000 tons of enemy shipping. Wake of the Wahoo is Sterling’s authentic account of a remarkable crew, captain, and their ship.
This new edition includes additional photographs of the Wahoo and a new Epilogue by Steve W. Chadde detailing the discovery of the underwater wreckage of the Wahoo in waters off the northern tip of Japan in 2006.

