Pearl Harbor. The Slot. Surigao Strait. Okinawa. Four years of the Pacific War as seen from the bridge of a single destroyer - and from the interior of the man who fought her.On the morning of December 7, 1941, Lieutenant Commander James Morrow is the senior officer aboard USS Calloway when the attack begins. His captain is ashore. His orders do not cover this. In the chaos of burning Battleship Row, with Arizona's oil spreading toward his ship, Morrow makes a decision in the time available - and sets in motion a career, and a reckoning, that will take four years to resolve.Morrow keeps a running count of his dead. It begins with Seaman Reyes, lost in a grounding in 1939 when Morrow froze for eleven seconds. It grows through the night actions in the Solomons, the long grinding campaign of the Slot, the torpedo run at Surigao Strait, and the radar picket stations off Okinawa where kamikazes come in waves and destroyers are the first thing they find. By the spring of 1945 he has forty-one names.Alongside him: Ensign Philip Ashe, a Yale man with shaking hands who becomes the finest fire control officer in the squadron. Chief Boatswain's Mate Salcedo, twenty-five years in the Navy, Puerto Rican, who finds people where they are and attends to what cannot be fixed. And the men of Calloway's crew - Fuentes, Webb, Kieffer, Tovar - each one a name Morrow will carry until he cannot anymore.Against him: a commodore who understands that fitness report language can destroy a career as effectively as enemy fire, and who is very good at writing fitness reports.This is not a novel about heroism. It is a novel about command - what it costs, what it makes, and what it leaves behind.Remain on Station covers the full arc of the Pacific War, from the Sunday morning quiet of Pearl Harbor to V-J Day, with technical and historical precision drawn from the actual operational record. The night surface engagements in the Solomons, the column spacing failures of the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, the torpedo geometry of Surigao Strait, the radar picket casualties of Okinawa - the novel earns every detail.But its subject is finally human: the arithmetic of loss that a commanding officer carries, and the question of whether precision - keeping the count, writing the exact report, naming the dead in order - is the closest thing to honor available to a man who cannot bring them back.For readers of James D. Hornfischer, Herman Wouk, and James Salter. For anyone who has read Neptune's Inferno, The Caine Mutiny, or The Thin Red Line and wanted a novel that stands alongside them.
AmazonPagina's: 323, Paperback, Independently published
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