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1
Holland: U.S. Navy
2
Propaganda poster: Library of Congress
3
Officer boards German submarine: IWM
4
Lindemann: IWM
5
Blackett: Lotte Meitner-Graf, courtesy AIP
6
Tizard: IWM
7
Williams: Courtesy The Royal Society; Gordon: Courtesy Clare Gordon
8
Zuckerman: Zuckerman Archive, University of East Anglia
9
HMCS
Sackville
: Canadian Navy Heritage Project
10
Convoy: Library of Congress
11
Pilot of a Sunderland: IWM
12
Bush: Courtesy MIT Museum
13
Baker: Naval History and Heritage Command
14
Morse and Shockley: AIP
15
Slessor: IWM
16
Cartoon: NARA
17
Electromechanical bombe: U.S. Navy
18
U-118
: U.S. Navy
19
U-boats under construction: IWM
Stephen Budiansky is a journalist and military historian. His previous books include
Air
Power
,
Battle of Wits
,
The Bloody Shirt
,
Her Majesty’s Spymaster
, and
Perilous Fight
.
Perilous Fight
is also available as an eBook: 978-0-307-59518-8
For more information, please visit
www.aaknopf.com
The Irish-born inventor John P. Holland in one of his early submarines (
Illustration Credit 1
)
An American propaganda poster from the First World War highlights the U-boat threat (
Illustration Credit 2
)
A British officer boards a German submarine as it arrives in Harwich to surrender, November 1918 (
Illustration Credit 3
)
The “Prof,” Frederick A. Lindemann (left), with Winston Churchill (
Illustration Credit 4
)
Patrick Blackett (
Illustration Credit 5
)
Sir Henry Tizard, who headed the British scientific air defense committee and repeatedly clashed with Lindemann over science and war policy (
Illustration Credit 6
)
E. J. Williams and Cecil Gordon, who along with Blackett probably contributed the most to operational research against the U-boats (
Illustration Credit 7
)
The zoologist Solly Zuckerman, at Tobruk in 1943: his Tots and Quots club and their book,
Science in War
, were instrumental in mobilizing scientific manpower for the war. (
Illustration Credit 8
)
HMCS
Sackville
, one of the “cheap and nasty” flower-class escort corvettes (
Illustration Credit 9
)
A convoy of merchant ships crosses the Atlantic, 1942 (
Illustration Credit 10
)
A pilot of a Sunderland flying boat scans the sea on a U-boat patrol over the Atlantic (
Illustration Credit 11
)
Vannevar Bush, the MIT engineer who galvanized American defense research, in a characteristic pose (
Illustration Credit 12
)