War In the Deep – Pacific Subm
The author’s thesis is that World War II was the most extensive undersea war ever fought. No other war in history can equal up to this aquatic war. Hoyt wrote about many aquatic battles during the war starting with the Japanese invasion at Pearl Harbor to the submarine battle just three days before the end of the war. He explains the hardships, troubles, and defeats that the submariners had throughout the book. In the beginning of the war, many submarines had no clue if their torpedoes they shot actually blew up. Some torpedoes prematurely exploded and some didn’t even blow up when it hit its enemy. Not to mention, most of the torpedoes didn’t even strike the enemies. The U.S. thought they sunk many Japanese subs, but when they looked at the Japanese records, they came to find out that not one Japanese person on that sub was even injured. Hoyt writes about how the aquatic attacks improve with technology during the war.2. What problem does the author analyze? Hoyt analyzes about how the U.S. is first brutally attacked by the Japanese and then they dominate the Pacific Ocean. On the day of the unexpected attack of Pearl Harbor, the Japanese used their submarines as an escape root back
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Some common words found in the essay are:
Pacific Ocean, History Submariners, Pearl Harbor, War II, Japan Pilots, Navy Cross, World History, Japan United, , Harbor Japanese, war ii, world war ii, world war, pacific ocean, aquatic battles, extremely aquatic, book extremely, aquatic ships, world history, book provoking, recommend book, extremely aquatic ships,
Approximate Word count = 975
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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