In 1939, young English naval signalman Geoffrey Holder-Jones began his
career by surviving a German mine attack in the Thames estuary. World
War II took him as naval officer to Iceland, the Norwegian island of
Spitsbergen, and the United States. Commissioned as a naval officer and
given command of his own ship, Jones then patrolled the waters off
Canada and Newfoundland before returning to Britain in 1944. This true
story, written on the basis of personal conversations and a scrapbook
entrusted to the author 60 years after the war, illuminates one of the
great achievements of the war the beating of the German U-boat blockade
of the American coast by squadrons of Allied ships that were little more
than motley collections of armed trawlers and whalers. With a sense of
humor and decency that sustained him through the ordeals of convoy duty
in the Arctic Ocean, Signalman Jones has related his story to Tim Parker
with vivid observations and an eye for the absurd.