Phenomenal – an operational history of the naval war in the English Channel, North Sea and Baltic Sea from August 1914 through to the end of January 1915. As well as the actions themselves, it covers the personalities involved and provides valuable insight into the challenges of command and communication in fleets that had undergone radical technological change in the years leading up to the First World War. The book is clearly written by someone who has both a thorough academic and intuitive understanding of the subject.
The standard of writing is very high – it is engaging and interesting without dropping into ‘dramatics’, and the structure of the book itself takes readers through a range of complex topics, events and issues in an easy and intuitive fashion. The standard of editing is very high – I only spotted on slip in the 300+ pages of text of the main body of the book, which is almost unheard of these days.
The standard of the research is also excellent – there’s an 18-page bibliography, which includes a number of unpublished dissertations and private papers, as well as official documents, journal articles and books. There are also 43 pages of notes, which are primarily for referencing, but also include some further information where appropriate. There is a thorough index, a list of illustrations (these aren’t the focus of the work – the images are well-chosen, but are relatively small) and track charts for the actions (which are larger, taking up a whole page), as well as a number of maps.
Importantly, in the conclusion, the book relates the history of the early stages of the northern European naval conflict of World War One to contemporary naval challenges, highlighting the clear relevance of history to getting better results in the present and future.
All in all, it’s an excellent book, and sets a high standard for similar works to be benchmarked against. It might be a little challenging if it was the first book on naval history someone had read (as there are a number of naval/maritime terms used that aren’t explained in the book), but if someone wanted to get a good understanding of the first seven months of the First World War at sea in the North Sea, Channel and Baltic, I’d be very surprised if there was a better source available.