Gamble in the Coral Sea

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5th Koku Sentai
A01=Michal A. Piegzik
Aircraft Carriers
aircrew attrition impact
Author_Michal A. Piegzik
Battle of Midway
carrier battle lessons
carrier battles
carrier strike tactics
carrier warfare 1942
Category=JWCK
Category=NHW
Category=NHWR7
Chester Nimitz
Combined Fleet operations
dive bombers
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
fleet carrier damage control
Fourth Fleet planning
Frank Jack Fletcher decisions
Imperial Japanese Navy
Imperial Japanese Navy operations
Japanese archival research
Japanese carrier doctrine
Japanese command failures
Japanese war planning errors
Japanese warships
Midway prelude analysis
MO Kido Butai
naval codebreaking intelligence
naval fuel logistics
naval strategic miscalculation
Operation MO strategy
Pacific theater naval history
Pacific Theater of Operations
Pacific War
Port Moresby invasion
reconnaissance failures
Shoho sinking
Shokaku damage analysis
signals intelligence Pacific
South Pacific campaign
TF 17 operations
USS Lexington
USS Yorktown
Yamamoto strategy debate
Zuikaku air losses

Product details

  • ISBN 9781682479964
  • Weight: 725g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Naval Institute Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Driven by extensive Japanese primary sources, Gamble in the Coral Sea offers an operational analysis of the first clash of aircraft carriers at the pivotal Battle of the Coral Sea from the Japanese perspective, including leadership, tactics, and errors that brought a numeric victory but a strategic loss for Japan that halted their bold advance into the South Pacific and ultimately set the stage for Midway. 

The opening salvos of the Battle of the Coral Sea, the first large-scale carrier clash in history, were fired one month before Midway. Gamble in the Coral Sea recounts, for the first time in English, the story of this battle from the Japanese point of view. Based on extensive Japanese-language sources, author Michał A. Piegzik forcefully challenges established Western narratives surrounding this critical engagement in the Pacific War.  

Operation MO, the Japanese plan to seize Port Moresby, kicked off in early May 1942. By committing three carriers, including the famous Shōkaku and Zuikaku, the Nippon Kaigun’s command risked a critical part of their fleet just before the envisaged decisive battle at Midway in the Central Pacific, scheduled for early July. The operation was considered a vital part of Japanese strategy. Victory would isolate Australia and New Zealand and extend access to vital resources crucial to Japan’s war effort. Victory, however, would prove elusive after American codebreakers deciphered Japanese radio traffic that revealed their plans in the weeks leading up to the launch of Operation MO. 

Using this intelligence to their advantage, U.S forces located elements of the Japanese navy as they steamed through the Coral Sea. Soon after, history’s first carrier battle began. Piegzik combines expertise in military history with mastery of the Japanese language to provide a rare perspective on the Imperial Japanese Navy’s operational choices during the battle. His use of Japanese archival documents and personal testimonies from surviving Japanese crew members uncovers new dimensions to the battle. The clash proved to be a Pyrrhic victory for the Japanese, who sunk the Lexington and crippled the Yorktown but were forced to call off Operation MO due to the severe damage inflicted on Shōkaku and the heavy losses among their aircrews.  

Revealed here are the circumstances and actual reasons for the Japanese failure and the revised impact of the Battle of the Coral Sea on the Battle of Midway. Beyond tactical details, Piegzik offers insight into the broader consequences of the battle. He engages with sources previously underexplored and integrates them with Allied perspectives to ensure a well-rounded understanding of the events. A vital addition to any World War II collection, Gamble in the Coral Sea offers a nuanced and thorough exploration of a battle that significantly shaped the trajectory of the war in the Pacific. 
 

Michał A. Piegzik is a lecturer at Edinburgh Napier University with a PhD in Japanese private law. He was awarded the Japanese Ministry of Education scholarship for exceptional research results. The Pacific War is his life’s passion. He has published in Poland, Japan, the UK, and the Netherlands. Gamble in the Coral Sea is his debut book in the United States. 

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