A Leaf upon the Sea

A Small Ship in the Mediterranean, 1941-1943

By Gordon W. Stead
Categories: History, Military History
Publisher: UBC Press
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774844789, 218 pages, November 2011
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774856805, 218 pages, November 2007

Table of contents

Plates and Maps

Preface

1. Focus

2. Sea Change

3. Ocean Passage

4. The Portal

5. Cover Story

6. False Colours

7. The Fortress

8. The Eye of the Storm

9. The Bottom of the Barrel

10. Fast Company

11. Slack Water

12. Forth from the Citadel

13. Dark Descent

14. Pattern of Islands

15. Full Flood

16. Climax and Fulfilment

17. Sojourn Ashore

18. Singular Journey

19. Recessional

Appendix

Select Bibliography

Index

Description

The Mediterranean Sea in World War II was the scene of prolonged and
violent naval warfare between the British and the Axis powers, Italy
and Germany. The stories of the major squadrons and their admirals have
been told, as their actions led directly to the outcomes. Here is the
tale of the smallest surface ships, their officers and men who, at the
very tip of British sea power in that disputed sea, played vital roles
in making possible the successes of the more famous forces. It is told
by one of them -- a Canadian on loan to the Royal Navy who took a
leading part from the lowest ebb in British fortunes through the
struggle against almost overwhelming odds to the climax of the first
landings on the continent of Europe.

Reviews

An entertaining, human and very literate memoir that deserves the acclaim it has received ... A fine piece of work and welcome addition to the small but steadily growing body of literature on Canadians at sea in the Second World War.

- Donald E. Graves

A fascinating little book about a small but fascinating subject ... reads like a novel ... Reading between the lines one is constantly struck with the realization that the men and women of Stead's generation, especially those caught up in the various theaters of war, were tested and tempered by challenges almost unimaginable to persons coming of age in contemporary North America and Europe ... the human drama of life and combat in these cockleshells is a rich and endlessly engaging subject providing us with valuable insights into the workings of the human spirit in extreme adversity.

- James E. Valle

Stead's memoir is low-key with flashes of humour ... His operations, fought from a tiny platform that was indeed a leaf upon the sea, were no less important than the grand fleet designs that eventually secured victory.

- William Rayner