The Battle of the Atlantic: Convoys, Codebreaking, and the Fight to Feed an Island War

Author:   Rafael Conti
Publisher:   Vij Books
ISBN:  

9789377948610


Pages:   328
Publication Date:   20 April 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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The Battle of the Atlantic: Convoys, Codebreaking, and the Fight to Feed an Island War


Overview

An Island at war does not merely fight for territory; it fights for time at sea. In the Second World War, the Battle of the Atlantic became a running test of whether Britain and its allies could keep goods moving across thousands of miles of ocean while an adaptive submarine campaign sought to turn every crossing into delay, dispersal, and loss. The outcome hinged less on any single weapon than on the ability to manage flows, allocate scarce protection, and make decisions fast enough to matter. The Battle of the Atlantic: Convoys, codebreaking, and the fight to feed an island war reframes the campaign through naval logistics and the practical logic of the convoy system. Rafael Conti shows how convoy assembly, escort doctrine, basing, and air cover interacted with the enemy's search-and-concentrate methods. He follows the problem from ports and routeing desks to the shifting geometry of mid-ocean battles, explaining why ""more escorts"" was never a complete answer, and why small coordination failures could erase hard-won advantages. Throughout, the book treats intelligence realistically: signals intelligence reduced uncertainty, but only when institutions could translate perishable insight into timely routing, reinforcement, and action at sea. Written for general readers, students, and analysts, this is a guide to understanding maritime war as systems management under risk and uncertainty. Readers will come away with a clearer sense of what decided survival in the Atlantic: not a single turning point, but the cumulative alignment of organisation, information, reach, and production that kept the pipeline open when it mattered most.

Full Product Details

Author:   Rafael Conti
Publisher:   Vij Books
Imprint:   Vij Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.440kg
ISBN:  

9789377948610


ISBN 10:   9377948614
Pages:   328
Publication Date:   20 April 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Author Information

Rafael Conti is a nonfiction writer and research-driven storyteller with a sustained interest in how institutions make decisions under pressure. His work approaches military history as a meeting point of strategy, administration, technology, and human judgment, with particular attention to the practical mechanics that grand narratives often skip: schedules, reporting chains, maintenance realities, and the organisational compromises that shape what commanders can actually do.Conti writes in an academic register while keeping the reader close to operational problems as they were experienced, not as they appear in hindsight. He is drawn to the Battle of the Atlantic because it resists simple explanations. It can be told as a drama of heroism and invention, yet it is equally a story about queues in ports, fatigue on night watches, the ambiguity of partial information, and the discipline required to keep merchant shipping moving. That tension between the dramatic and the procedural sits at the centre of his perspective.A recurring thread in his thinking is the long European memory of blockade, scarcity, and maritime connection, and how those experiences shaped twentieth-century statecraft. Conti's aim is to offer readers a clear framework for understanding complex historical campaigns without reducing them to single causes, and to show why the Atlantic remains one of the best cases for thinking seriously about logistics and intelligence in modern war.

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