Publisher Description
On June 15, 1942, as thousands of vacationers lounged in the sun on Virginia Beach, a massive fireball erupted from a convoy of oil tankers steaming into Chesapeake Bay. By the next day, three ships lay at the bottom of the channel, victims of Lieutenant-Commander Horst Degen and his crew on the German submarine U-701.
In The Burning Shore, acclaimed military reporter Ed Offley presents a thrilling account of Degen’s rampage along the American coast and of US Lieutenant Harry J. Kane’s quest to bring him down. Since the beginning of 1942, German U-boats had prowled the waters of the Atlantic, sinking merchant ships and threatening to sever the lifeline of supplies flowing from the United States to Great Britain. But when Kane and his crew spotted the silhouette of U-701 offshore that summer, the ensuing clash signaled a critical turning point in the Battle of the Atlantic—and the beginning of an unlikely friendship between the two rival commanders.
A gripping tale of heroism and sacrifice, The Burning Shore describes how a small band of mariners and aviators drove Hitler’s wolf packs from America’s home waters.
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“We have a special appreciation for dramatic stories of untold wartime
heroism, and Ed Offley’s gripping tale does not disappoint. Veering from
the well-worn paths of World War II’s European and Pacific Theaters,
Offley’s The Burning Shore breaks new ground in its description of the
German U-boat invasion of America’s Eastern Seaboard in 1942, and the
courageous efforts by an undermanned United States military to prevent
the Nazis from crippling our war efforts in the Atlantic. Bravo.”—
Bob Drury and Tom Clavin, New York Times bestselling authors