The remarkably effective submarines (U-boats) of the German Navy
devastated the Allies during the first part of World War II and very
nearly brought British and American sea forces to their knees. Military
historian Hoyt here describes the years when U-boat "wolf packs" under
the command of Admiral Karl Doenitz terrorized the Allies, sinking a
third of Britain's battleships in 1939, and how the Allies came back,
developing anti-submarine weapons that sent almost three-fourths of the
U-boat crews to the bottom of the ocean. The U-Boat Wars is a gripping
account of the battles at sea and the men-Doenitz, Churchill, sub-hunter
Captain F. J. Walker, and others-who decided the fate of the Atlantic.