Topic & Content

Thesis

Author’s Background

Critical Observations

Positives

Negatives

Evaluation (Does the content support the thesis?)

Overall, the book is a fairly standard oral history collection centered around submarine sailors in the Cold War. The decades of experience represented by the interviewees give the reader a good overview of submarine life, what’s entailed in joining submarines, and how institutional changes have occurred. The organization of the book could be better, but the author chose to format the interviews in a certain way. Furthermore, the information presented in this book is nothing really new. Readers looking for a history of the Cold War, proxy conflicts, or technical information on submarines should find other works.

Rating:

Rating: 3.5 out of 5.
  1. On a personal note, I occasionally encounter submarine veterans taking tours on Blueback who seem to assume that they’re the world’s expert on all submarines, and therefore, what occurred on their submarine must apply to Blueback, as well. While these submariners may be well-versed on their particular boat, they don’t know much about Blueback, a 1950s-vintage non-nuclear diesel-electric attack boat. A variation of this is when a veteran assumes that certain policies or practices still apply, when in fact things have changed. The reality is that most sailors aren’t historians, and the naval history that was taught to them was taught without much nuance. For example, I’ve met more than one sub vet who thinks women are still only serving on ballistic missile subs (AKA boomers). While it’s true that women initially started out only on boomers, today, there are over a dozen fast attack subs with women on them. I’ve even met one who was aboard USS Jimmy Carter. ↩︎
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