Captain Alan William Frank Sutton's enthralling biography starts when,
as a young midshipman, he was in command of a small picket boat
returning a potentially mutinous crew to the battle-cruiser HMS Repulse
on which he served. The book builds to an amazing and exciting climax
which ends in the open cockpit of a Fairey Swordfish torpedo bomber
during the legendary attack on the Italian fleet at Taranto in November
1940.
The Littorio sees us: she opens fire. The flashes of her close-range
weapons stab at us. First one, then others everything opens up along her
whole length. We're coming in on her beam; we're in a terrible mass of
cross-fire cruisers, battleships, shore batteries, the lot. The bloody
Italians are firing everything apart from major armament. But we're too
low for the enemy gun-aimers. The place stinks of cordite and
incendiaries and burning sulfur. Everywhere is wreathed in smoke thick,
choking, foul stuff.
This biography has been written with the full cooperation of Captain
Sutton who has given the author fascinating insight into a career of
remarkable courage and diversity.