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Good Night Officially: The Pacific War Letters Of A Destroyer Sailor

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From the time when he joined the US destroyer "Howorth" during the Pacific War in April 1944 until his death a year later in a kamikaze attack off Okinawa, Yeoman Second Class Orvill Raines wrote a series of letters to his young bride. Due to Raines's special relationship with the officer responsible for censoring, the correspondence was uncensored, and for this book the letters have been edited and set in their historical context. The letters reflect the horrific experiences of the thousands of American sailors involved in the fight against the Japanese, and conclude with Raines's final letter to his wife, which he instructed was to be opened in the event of his death.

307 pages, Hardcover

First published February 1, 1994

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Elisabeth.
Author 28 books192 followers
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April 26, 2017
I read this for research, and had to skim and cram a bit owing to a library due date, so I can't review it as thoroughly as I might have otherwise. I can say it's definitely a fine primary source for studying life aboard a WWII destroyer. Raines was a reporter in civilian life, so his letters include a good deal more observation and description of places and events that other WWII letters home that I've seen. (He's also pretty blunt in describing some more gruesome things he witnessed.) But by far the defining characteristic of the letters is his intense homesickness and longing for his wife, reiterated along with profuse declarations of his love for her in nearly every single letter.

I was actually pretty amazed how freely Raines discussed battles and locations, although he usually waited until able to do so in the past tense. Though he mentions letters being censored, there's only two instances of it in the letters selected for this book, though he gives quite detailed eyewitness accounts of what he could see of the Leyte Gulf and Iwo Jima campaigns.

What I personally found annoying were the editorial footnotes, which, rather than merely elucidating technical terms or historical events mentioned in the text, found it necessary to psychoanalyze Raines' comments on the enemy, his and his shipmates' responses to danger, his own emotions, etc.
Profile Image for Matt.
197 reviews9 followers
July 30, 2009
Good Night Officially is a must read for anyone who wants to understand the average sailor's life and meaning. I have told students to read this book and each time they have a life changing experience. Raines writing places the reader in the U.S.S. Howarth and the reader likes thes kind and loving man.

The reader will feel voyeristic in reading the passion between Raines and his wife but the reader will feel lucky in the end reading this work.

My only criticism of this edition is that it has by William M. McBride who is the editor. Mr. McBride is not the author it is James Orvill Raines who was a gifted writer and these letters to his wife shouldn't have McBride's name other than edited by.

Good Night Officially and Pacific War Diary by James Fahey are must reads to understand what sailors went through and how lucky we are to know Mr. Fahey and Mr. Raines through their writing.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews