"Once you heard that pinging sound you knew they had got to you, and
then the depth charges came. Terrible, just terrible." Kurt Wehling,
U-boat survivor
The steel coffins were the name given to the U-boats of the Kriegsmarine
by their own crews. Their fatalistic view of the war was certainly
justified; it is estimated that seventy-five per cent of the 39,000 men
who sailed in the U-boat fleet paid the ultimate price as the tide of
war turned inexorably against Hitler's Germany. This is the illustrated
history of the U-boat war from the perspective of the men who sailed
into battle in the service of the Third Reich. Drawing heavily on the
accounts of the last remaining survivors, the U-boat War's traces the
grim story of the rise and fall of the grey wolves. The memories of the
brief days of the "happy times" of superiority and success were soon
replaced by the stark terror of the enfolding nightmare as the
realization dawned that the hunters had become the hunted. Written by
Emmy award winning author Bob Carruthers, this powerful account of the
U-boat war features extensive personal recollections, rare photographs
and extracts from contemporary propaganda magazines producing a vivid
picture of what it meant to fight beneath the waves.