This compelling story is the result of many hours spent recording the
memories of Fred Henley. At the age of 14 Fred worked on a Thames
sailing barge, then after his training at HMS Ganges, he joined his
first ship which took him from the icy Arctic Ocean to the heat of West
Africa where the Bismarck and her support ships were hunted. His
experiences included visiting Archangel, sailing on Arctic convoys,
capturing German supply ships, the failed attack on Oran, landings in
Piraeus, Salonika and the French Riviera and operating with special
forces in the Greek Islands. There is inevitably some humour when Fred
recounts his encounters with girls. The book then explores the tragic
loss of his last submarine, HMS Truculent. In the cold January waters of
the Thames Estuary, within sight of Southend, England, over 60 men were
lost in a major disaster, just five years after the end of the war. The
voices of the survivors are heard telling how they stood in complete
blackness in a sunken submarine, waiting for the water to come in so
that they could escape to the surface, only for all but a few to drift
away and die in the darkness. The story concludes with happier times
with Fred visiting ports in the Mediterranean during peacetime as a
married man.