cover image Into Enemy Waters: A World War II Story of the Demolition Divers Who Became the Navy SEALs

Into Enemy Waters: A World War II Story of the Demolition Divers Who Became the Navy SEALs

Andrew Dubbins. Diversion, $28.99 (352p) ISBN 978-1-63576-772-8

Journalist Dubbins delivers a rousing history of the U.S. Naval Combat Demolition Units focused on combat swimmer George Morgan and demolition school commander Draper Kauffman. A former lifeguard, Morgan joined the Navy at age 17 and was given a pair of swim fins and a diving mask (neither of which he had ever seen before) and told he was volunteering for naval combat demolition. After surviving the training program devised by Kauffman, Morgan was assigned to clear obstacles from the waters off Omaha Beach for the D-Day invasion. His unit went in with the first wave of Marines and suffered a 52% casualty rate. Afterwards, Morgan and Kauffman were sent to the Pacific, where Underwater Demolitions Teams destroyed mines and booby traps and conducted reconnaissance missions before invasions began. At Okinawa, Morgan helped map the approaches to the beach and detonate hundreds of wooden stakes that had been sharpened to deadly points and embedded in the coral. Wounded at Borneo, he was training for the invasion of the Japanese home islands when the war ended. Drawing on extensive interviews with Morgan, Dubbins creates a vivid and fast-moving narrative of courage and sacrifice under the most extreme conditions. WWII buffs will be thrilled. (Aug.)