Nazi Saboteurs on the Bayou intertwines historic persons; actual events and distant locales of WWII with a fast-moving fictional Nazi plot to disrupt the manufacture of Higgins boats; the remarkable landing craft that won the war for the Allies. Spanning the globe from amphibious landings at Guadalcanal; to the Navajo code talker school; to the exotic environs of New Orleans; to the secret world of Bletchley Park; this tautly written thriller; covering two weeks during the summer of 1942; combines a fully imagined cast of characters with the historically important figures of Andrew Higgins; members of American and British Intelligence; Navajo code talker Chester Nez; Commander Ian Fleming of MI6; along with a Polish intelligence officer; and “Silver Dollar Sam†Carolla; crime boss of New Orleans. An old German is found dead in a New Orleans whorehouse. Sewn into the lining of the dead man’s vest is a notebook filled with hand-drawn maps and notes about the comings and goings at military installations. German conspirators fret that their local contact (the dead German) is overdue. Mafia crime boss Nico Carolla; is soon drawn into the disposition of the corpse. We move to the Pacific and meet the grandson of the dead German; PFC Brock; a U.S. Marine being trained for the landings at Guadalcanal. Then we meet Andrew Jackson Higgins at the helm of the single most important landing craft ever built; the Higgins Boat; the steel-ramped landing craft that brought American troops to Pacific islands and to Normandy. In his colorful manner; Higgins is instructing a class of Coast Guard newbies on how to properly drive and operate his nearly indestructible boat. Higgins faces shortages of materials; manpower; and factory space. The Mafia boss controls much of the labor supply. Accommodations must be made to placate the mob family; who also have Old World connections in critical to the upcoming North African landings. The Waffen-SS officers charged with sabotaging the Higgins Boat plant arrive; only to learn of the loss of the intelligence gathered by the dead German. Now enter the code breakers at Bletchley Park who intercept the commando team’s messages; including one female mathematician through whose eyes we see inside Bletchley Park. America is almost entirely dependent on Britain’s MI6 for intelligence gathering. We meet Martina Amerada; a Cuban woman with a high-level banking responsibility; including ties to British intelligence; and who is Nico Carolla’s mistress. Martina moves money for the crime family and provides diplomatic cover between the Palermo branch of the family and the planners of Operation Torch. We are also introduced to the Navajo code-talker program essential to securing Marine Corps messages in the Pacific theater. The German commando team searches for the lost notebook by visiting the whorehouses Brock has been known to frequent; which leads to a murder and later retaliation by the Mafia against the German conspirators. Half the German commando team perishes. US marshals are drawn into the story as bodies are discovered in the nearby bayous. The Mafia is suspected. When the marshals confront Carolla; the marshals are put on the trail of the commandos which leads to the death of the marshals. Bletchley Park is busy trying to crack the code imbedded in the Himmler messages; We move back to the Pacific where grandson Brock is involved in the bloody landings ahead of Guadalcanal. Brock is wounded and nearly dies as the remaining commando attempts to demolish the largest Higgins Boat manufacturing facility in New Orleans. With the help of British intelligence; Nico Carolla prevents the plant from being destroyed and thus becomes the hero of the story. Operation Torch gets underway and the Higgins boats prove their indispensability to the war effort. PFC Brock recovers from his wounds; and Martina takes possession of all intelligence related to the German commandos so the threat never becomes public knowledge.
#177423 in Books 2014-10-15Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.00 x .39 x 6.00l; .52 #File Name: 0692294392156 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A useful resource with new informationBy Francis HamitThis book sheds new light on the internal politics of the Confederate States in way that goes counter to the "Lost Cause" mythology promulgated after the war. It has information not available elsewhere. The writing is utiitarian but not elegant.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. thoroughly enjoyed this fast-pacedBy Joseph A. TruglioInteresting study of little discussed issue. thoroughly enjoyed this fast-paced; fact-filled book.0 of 1 people found the following review helpful. In a succinct; state-by-state overview of the main--and the ...By Nancy MontwielerIn a succinct; state-by-state overview of the main--and the many; many minor--events that separated succession supporters from Unionists; Calvin Goddard Zon presents further areas for research and inquiry by both serious scholars and Civil War buffs. Zon's book paints in broad strokes a quick look at the issues that hindered the development of a truly united South and looks at the Lost Cause in terms of the actions that many Southerners took in their fight against a united Confederacy. His succinct analysis highlights some well known and some not-so-well know positions taken by many in the South. His ideas and anecdotes are ripe for picking and offer a mostly little known view of dissent in the South.