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ASSASSIN'S RAID by Roberto de Haro

ASSASSIN'S RAID

: Killing Admiral Yamamoto

by Roberto de Haro

Pub Date: Aug. 14th, 2009
ISBN: 978-1-4401-5377-8

The story of the American mission to kill the Japanese admiral responsible for the Pearl Harbor attacks told through the eyes of a young Midwestern pilot.

Kevin “Lance” Corbet is an outstanding young man attending Purdue during the ’40s. He’s the kind of Greatest Generation individual that seems proliferate in that age–he excels at sports, academics and other endeavors, yet dedicates himself entirely to the national cause when his country is in need. Half a world away is Japanese Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto, overzealous, imperial and grandiose. After several stints living in the United States as a military diplomat, Yamamoto develops a devastating plan to attack America on the Pacific front–the Pearl Harbor offensive of December 1941. Yamamoto has now made an enemy of millions of Americans, Kevin among them. De Haro’s novel follows Kevin through his time in college and basic military training to the Pacific theater, where his piloting skills are at the front of an assassination mission aimed at Yamamoto. The slow build-up to the war and overly detailed historical descriptions may leave some readers pining for the wartime action to commence. While well-written, these parts feel methodical and obligatory and risk alienating the mainstream reader with their too-thorough strolls through military life. But de Haro does an admirable job of bringing Kevin and Yamamoto alive with very human characterizations and real-life experiences, and these depictions are invaluable in helping this book stand as a work of fiction. While it’s clear this is a novel written by a historian, the book succeeds in straddling genres. A terrific effort.

A balanced, well-researched and strongly written book; history buffs in particular will greatly enjoy.