Big Guns in the Atlantic
Germany’s battleships and cruisers raid the convoys, 1939–41
Angus Konstam author Edouard A Groult illustrator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:19th Aug '21
Should be back in stock very soon

The history of Germany's early raids in the Atlantic, focusing on the success of 1941's Operation Berlin and how it led to the Kriegsmarine sending in its greatest battleship - the mighty, ill-fated Bismarck.
A fascinating and detailed analysis of the Kriegsmarine’s Atlantic raids in the early war, ideal for readers interested in Germany’s World War II naval operations.
At the outbreak of World War II the German Kriegsmarine still had a relatively small U-boat arm. To reach Britain's convoy routes in the North Atlantic, these boats had to pass around the top of the British Isles - a long and dangerous voyage to their "hunting grounds". Then, the fall of France, Denmark and Norway in early 1940 dramatically altered the strategic situation. The Atlantic was now far easier to reach, and to escape from.
Featuring coverage of the armoured cruiser Deutschland, battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau and cruisers Admiral Scheer and Admiral Hipper, this book by acclaimed naval expert Angus Konstam examines the efficacy and risk of German naval operations in the Atlantic, from Operation Berlin to the Bismarck.
The artwork in this book is extremely good and the narrative details the Kriegsmarine’s early Atlantic raids which led directly to the ill-fated Bismarck’s only voyage, that in turn led to Hitler’s loss of confidence in his surface Navy. -- SIMON HAILL * The Naval Review *
ISBN: 9781472845962
Dimensions: 246mm x 184mm x 8mm
Weight: 264g
80 pages