Reviews
" The Wolf is an extraordinary work of storytelling and scholarship. From the very first pages, Guilliatt and Hohnen snap this ship's dramatic journey into brilliant focus, and you feel for these people, get to know them, and you root for them to survive. This is history brought vividly to life. This otherwise unknown story of the Great War has found its great chroniclers." -Doug Stanton, author of Horse Soldiers and In Harm's Way, "To the short list of must-read nautical adventures, add Guilliatt's and Hohnen's The Wolf, a chronicle worthy of Conrad. I thought I was a student of military and naval history, but until I read this powerful and engrossing tale of tragedy, survival and heroism I had no idea that such an epic journey had occurred. Taut, poignant, and evocative, you can taste the salt wind in your face and smell the blood in the water, but you can't put the book down." -Robert Drury, co-author, Halsey's Typhoon: The True Story of a Fighting Admiral, an Epic Storm, and an Untold Rescue, "To the short list of must-read'nautical adventures, add Guilliatt's and Hohnen'sThe Wolf,a chronicle worthy of Conrad.'?I thought I was a student of military and naval history, but until I read this powerful and engrossing tale'of tragedy, survival and heroism I had no idea that'such an epic'journey'had occurred. Taut, poignant, and evocative,?you can taste'the salt wind in your face and smell the blood in the water, but you can't put the book'down."—Robert Drury, co-author,Halsey's Typhoon: The True Story of a Fighting Admiral, an Epic Storm, and an Untold Rescue, "The Wolfis an extraordinary work of storytelling and scholarship. From the very first pages, Guilliatt and Hohnen snap this ship's dramatic journey into brilliant focus, and you feel for these people, get to know them, and you root for them to survive. This is history brought vividly to life. This otherwise unknown story of the Great War has found its great chroniclers."?—Doug Stanton, author ofHorse SoldiersandIn Harm's Way, "The authors' thoroughly researched and convincing study makes clear that good modern naval history is more than just a true account of strategy or battles, for it deals not only with ships but with men." -- U.S. Naval Institute Book Review, "The Wolfis one of the strangest, and strangely thrilling, war-at-sea adventures I have ever read. It captures the excitement but also the moral ambiguity of war, with intriguing characters cast upon a vast stage."— Evan Thomas,Newsweek, author ofSea of Thunder: Four Commanders and the Last Great Naval Campaign 1941-1945andJohn Paul Jones: Sailor, Hero, Father of the American Navy, " The Wolf is one of the strangest, and strangely thrilling, war-at-sea adventures I have ever read. It captures the excitement but also the moral ambiguity of war, with intriguing characters cast upon a vast stage." - Evan Thomas, Newsweek , author of Sea of Thunder: Four Commanders and the Last Great Naval Campaign 1941-1945 and John Paul Jones: Sailor, Hero, Father of the American Navy, "To the short list of must-read nautical adventures, add Guilliatt's and Hohnen'sThe Wolf,a chronicle worthy of Conrad. I thought I was a student of military and naval history, but until I read this powerful and engrossing tale of tragedy, survival and heroism I had no idea that such an epic journey had occurred. Taut, poignant, and evocative, you can taste the salt wind in your face and smell the blood in the water, but you can't put the book down."—Robert Drury, co-author,Halsey's Typhoon: The True Story of a Fighting Admiral, an Epic Storm, and an Untold Rescue, "The Wolfis an extraordinary work of storytelling and scholarship. From the very first pages, Guilliatt and Hohnen snap this ship's dramatic journey into brilliant focus, and you feel for these people, get to know them, and you root for them to survive. This is history brought vividly to life. This otherwise unknown story of the Great War has found its great chroniclers." —Doug Stanton, author ofHorse SoldiersandIn Harm's Way