This book is one of many volumes within the Time-Life series on World War 2 --- each one covering a specific facet of that War.
In general, these books are very well done. This book and the others in the series concisely cover the details of each campaign --- with excellent maps and illustrations. As a young lad visiting the local library in Idaho, I remember spending hours there reading these books --- they are great at capturing the key details, keeping the story moving, and illustrating well enough such that the reader can understand the impact and magnitude of each section in the book.
This book covers the American island hopping campaign in the Pacific --- starting with the Guadalcanal Campaign and ending the the Battle of Peleliu. The difficulties, risks, and mindset of the combatant commanders from both sides are captures --- as well as the perspectives of the men doing the fighting. While in our time considered to be a grand strategy thought beforehand, in this book, the island hopping strategy seems more an improvisation that Pacific commanders, Gen. MacArthur and ADM Halsey evolved into as they took the measure of their adversaries, sought to avoid high casualties by trying to conquer each Japanese island and stronghold. There were definite risks in such a strategy -- and in the beginning both leaders tended to plan for an out in the event Japanese forces proved stronger than anticipated.
But the Japanese military had reached too far. The massive distances involved in the Pacific are enough to tax the resources of modern militaries today, and this was no less the case. Japan had caught military forces in the Pacific poorly armed, unready, and reactive, and advanced far and fast in the beginning, thereby creating a network of bases each requiring a long logistical line to support, far greater than her Axis allies in Europe faced.
As the island hopping strategy progressed, both MacArthur and Halsey became increasingly audacious as 1943 rode into 1944 --- and there also may have been an element of rivalry and ego spurring both men to outdo the other. Normally, in military theaters, a divided command is a way to disaster. Yet, in the Pacific, the result was two fists each pummeling the Japanese --- in many cases, for example, the Japanese would dispatch naval forces to address MacArthur's latest advance in New Guinea --- only to divert them to respond to some attack by Halsey --- with the result that the forces arrived too late and too out of the way to help their forces in either location.
A nice feature of this book is the series' practice of, after each chapter having a photo essay on some aspect of the campaigns --- such as the role of Australia, the Sea Bees, etc. It's refreshing and fascinating.
Over all, this is an outstanding book. Just my opinion, but Time-Life ought to reprint the volumes, and they ought to be in every high school library. I recommend this for military history fans and, really, for everyone desiring to know more about this aspect of World War 2.