Nearly every World War II fighter squadron that flew in Europe has had
its history chronicled. Other than Pappy Boyington's famous VMF-214
Black Sheep, little has been written about Marine Corps squadrons in
World War II. The contribution of VMF-223, the Death Rattlers, over
Okinawa in the Spring of 1945 is virtually unknown. In two months there,
the squadron became the top-scoring unit of any service with 124 1/2
victories and produced 12 aces, the most for one tour of any Marine
squadron. The squadron downed 24 3/4 Japanese aircraft twice in its
tour, the most for a single Marine squadron in any single action. The
squadron's story is not only one of its pilots, combat, and valor, but
also of the enlisted men, the ground-crunchers, who made it function
against the Japanese kamikaze menace. Along with the traditional
historical perspective, it is an inside look at the personal side of
training and war. It is the story of a group of untried young men who
trained long and hard and became family.