WHEN DUTY WHISPERS LOW

Reviews

Cover Art

Images & Charts

Reviews 

Publisher's Weekly - Kikus - Library Journal - Tulsa Star

Book Review 
Publisher’s Weekly 
November 19, 2001 

The fourth novel from the writer of historical military thrillers (The Last Lieutenant, A Code for Tomorrow) combines two actual events from 1943 – the killing of Isoroku Yamamoto and the introduction of  proximity fuses into antiaircraft artillery shells – which the author (himself a veteran naval officer) highlights as watershed moments in the Pacific theater of WW II. Opening in the wake of the Japanese withdrawal from Guadalcanal and the attendant brutal naval battles, the novel follows the story of  Commdr. Jerry Landa and Lt. [Commander] Todd Ingram, the skipper and executive officer, respectively, of  the U.S.S. Howell, a destroyer on patrol in the notorious “Slot” of New Georgia Sound. Landa’s brother,  Josh, working on top-secret proximity fuses for American antiaircraft shells, is killed during a  research accident. When ammunition with the new fuse turns up at the Howell, the grieving Landa prohibits their use in his ship's guns. Predictably, the Howell is crippled in a Japanese air attack and  forced to beach on an island. A subsequent battle with Japanese Marines and a dramatic evacuation by PT boat leads to a race between navies to get to the store of the new ordnance in the Howell’s hulk. Extensive subplots featuring the cast’s many principals (Landa’s romance with the widow of one of his KIA friends and Ingram’s stalking by a U.S. government assassin over a security breach) round out the action, but it is the convincing historical  detail – from the grim Guadalcanal mortality chart to the “monster” battleship Musashi and the famous  victory missive “Pop Goes the Weasel” – that really distinguishes this book from the competition. (Mar. 21) 

Book Review 
Kirkus Reviews 
St. Martin’s Press (368 pp) 
December 1, 1001 
$24.95 
ISBN 0-312-27491-2 

America’s new top-secret antiaircraft fuse is at the heart of the action in the latest installment of a WW II naval saga (A Code For Tomorrow, 199 etc.). 

Gobbell continues the adventures of refreshingly human Annapolis grad 
Lieutenant Commander Todd Ingram, still on the destroyer Howell and in the thick of South Pacific shootups. The Howell’s skipper, Jerry Landa, is a hard-charging Brooklynite whose little MIT-grad brother Josh is at work on one of the Navy’s newest weapons, a wee radar-brained antiaircraft shell that will detonate when it nears its 
target seemingly a great improvement on the current ammo, though Josh has secretly warned Jerry not to use the shells if they come his way. Which they do. As do the Japanese, who blast the Howell and cause the crew to abandon ship. Word gets out that Landa might have saved the craft if he hadn’t listened to Josh. An enraged Ingram takes a poke at his commanding officer and returns to Long Beach to pick up a new command and dally a bit with Mrs. Ingram–except that she’s been mysteriously whisked off to Africa, even though she holds secrets too hot to let her go anywhere near enemy lines. Somebody’s been messing with the Ingram’s lives, but they don’t realize it. Just 
as he’s assuming command of a new destroyer, that ship gets shot out from under him too. Good thing he doesn’t know that Frank Ashton, the evil director of the fuse program has set machinery in motion to have him neutralized. Fuses, a government assassin, the great Admiral Yamamoto, some cowboys in those PT boats Jack Kennedy used to drive, and the good guys from the Howell all come together off 
Guadalcanal to sort things out in some agreeably tense action. 

The women are matronly babes, everybody says “swell” with a straight face, and the skullduggery is hokey. But, jeepers, it’s the 40s. And the seagoing stuff is dead-on.

Book Review Excerpts
LIBRARY JOURNAL
November 15, 2001

The battle scenes are frequent, ...straightforward and realistic.
Gobbell knows how to keep the story moving without overdoing the
mayhem...Fans of World War II fiction...will enjoy this latest entry.
Recommended for all public libraries.

TULSA WORLD
Tulsa, Oklahoma Metropolitan Area
June 16, 2002

When Duty Whispers Low
John J. Gobbell
St. Martin’s Press
$25.95

DUTY CALLS FOR SOUTH PACIFIC THRILLER

by Arthur Shoemaker

The period of February to June 1943 was a relatively quiet time in the Pacific War. American and Japanese forces were reeling from the massive expenditures of ships and manpower in the lower Solomons campaign, with the Japanese suffering the worst end of the bargain. The loss of Guadalcanal was a strategic setback.

At this time, 13 Essex-class carriers, quickly followed by another block of 11, were preparing to stem for the war zone. Soon, they were to become the major weapon for Adm. Chester W. Nimitz’s drive across the Central Pacific. But for the time being, the South Pacific Force was down to one carrier, the others having been sunk or damaged in the bloody battles in the lower Solomons from mid-1942 to early 1943. Thus surface forces in the Solomons were instructed to “keep pushing the Japs around a stalling tactic until new carriers and capital ships arrived."

The plot of “When Duty Whispers Low” evolves during the U.S. Navy’s epic battle with the Japanese in the South Pacific with the American invention of a top-secret detonator called a proximity fuse – a device that will help U.S. ships combat Japanese dive bombers and could turn the course of the war. Yet in the heat of battle, Capt. Jerry Landa refuses to use it – and pays the price. His ship, the USS Howell is torn in half by Japanese planes. Lt. Comdr. Todd Ingram confronts his captain about his refusal to use the new device and soon learns a deadly secret that could destroy the U.S. Navy, even as it prepares to battle its deadliest foe – the Japanese commander Isoroku Yamamoto. 

This novel is filled with classic battles, romances, backbiting, plus the brutality of war. The reader is transported to the South Pacific during WW II. Readers can smell the smoke and sea water, hear the explosions and screams and feel the relief of surviving a Japanese air strike. 

This is an exciting read by an author who knows how to spin a story. John J. Gobbell has emerged as a top writer of military thrillers. His first three novels, “A Code For Tomorrow,” “The Last Lieutenant,” and “The Brutus Lie,” received critical acclaim. He is a former Navy lieutenant who served in the 1960s as a destroyer weapons officer. 

The wide scope of the Pacific Theater is the perfect backdrop for his latest. You’ll find it hard to put down. "



"When Duty Whispers Low" Bound Galley