This is the most comprehensive account of the Pacific Theater of World War II that I’ve ever read. John Costello’s “The Pacific War” doesn’t just cover the well known battles like Midway, Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa. There is extensive study of the strategy, leadership, and impacts of the lesser known campaigns in New Guinea, the Philippines, and the China-Burma-India (CBI) Theater. The first hundred or so pages masterfully recounts the history of western relations with China and Japan that led to the rising tensions between those nations and the eventual outbreak of war. Costello also pays special attention to the importance of military intelligence, logistics, adaptive doctrine, innovative technology, and inter-service cooperation in achieving victory against a determined enemy force spread across a large portion of Asia and the Pacific island chains. This book also provided an excellent profile of some of the most colorful and competent leaders of the Pacific - MacArthur, Mountbatten, Slim, Stilwell, Vasey, Nimitz, Halsey, Spruance, Sprague, Kinkaid, Turner, Geiger, H.M. Smith, Kenney, Yamamoto, Yamashita, Nagumo, and Ushijima. I emphatically recommend this book to anyone interested in learning about some of the less glamorized chapters of WWII and how future wars in the Pacific might be fought.