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The Cinderella Service: RAF Coastal Command 1939 - 1945 Kindle Edition

3.6 3.6 out of 5 stars 240 ratings

This book reveals the vital contribution that RAF Coastal Command made to the Allies war effort. Although often referred to as the 'Cinderella Service' because by its nature, it did not gain the recognition it deserved and was overshadowed by Fighter and Bomber Commands and considering that it was not given priority in terms of aircraft and equipment, its wartime record was second to none.The two main roles of Coastal Command were anti-submarine work in the Atlantic and anti-shipping operations against enemy warships and merchant vessels. This work looks at every aspect of the command's work, equipment and aircraft and draws upon many first-hand accounts. Lengthy and comprehensive appendices cover Orders of Battle, Commanders, U boats sunk, ships sunk, aircraft losses and casualties.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"What this book achieves is a look at every aspect of Coastal Command's work including equipment and aircraft and draws upon many first-hand accounts.\information becomes available with comprehensive appendices covering Order of Battle (including in some cases FAA squadrons'lent' for Coastal Command duties, Commanders, U Boats and Ships Sunk, Aircraft Losses and the Command's Casualties. To these valuable references in added a first class Bibliography. This is a paperback reprint, albeit very well produced with pictures which will be new to many plus Maps and a Glossary. Excellent value, excellent material and hugely useful to the historian, amateur or otherwise."
Fleet Air Arm Officers' Association

About the Author

Andrew W.A. Hendrie is an author and military historian.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00DN5TYQA
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Pen & Sword Aviation; Reprint edition (July 19, 2007)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ July 19, 2007
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 41647 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 583 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.6 3.6 out of 5 stars 240 ratings

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Andrew Hendrie
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Customer reviews

3.6 out of 5 stars
3.6 out of 5
240 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2013
The Cinderella Service-RAF Coastal Command 1939-1945 by Andrew Hendrie. Published by Pen & Sword 2006/10. ISBN 9781848842021

It's with some shame that it has taken over 65yrs before a truly competent & detailed publication has appeared about the exploits of RAF Coastal Command. It's more favoured kin of Fighter & Bomber Commands, have been almost exhaustively mined over the intervening decades, yet bar for the odd book here & there Coastal Commands efforts & history have been sidelined to a few sentences or notations. Hendrie's book will remain the unofficial history of Coastal Command for many a year, and it will fly that flag with pride, for such is the quality of Hendrie's work.

We see how Coastal Command grew from a motley collection of some 240 odd wholly unsuitable aircraft for the most part in 1939. To a large efficient machine of around 1000 modern aircraft, with many specialist features & missions to boot. The book is broken down into 9 chapters, with the first two covering aircraft types & weapons accordingly. We see how Coastal Command struggled to get the aircraft it required, especially in the face of determined opposition from Bomber Command and also to some extent Churchill himself. The early make do collection was gradually replaced by more usable types, able to perform the tasks asked of it. Weaponry, as in any war develops at a pace and that was no different here. The aerial depth charge being Coastal Commands prime weapon is discussed in some depth, along with torpedoes, rockets and guns. The author makes due note of the initiative shown by the men of 10 Sqn RAAF, who employed some 18 machine guns on some of there aircraft early in the war, before being reined in by the powers that be.

After these 2 opening chapters we get into the meat of the book, the operational aspect. This is neatly sub-divided into Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW), covered in Chapters 3 & 4), with chapters 5 & 6 covering Anti-Shipping (Merchant) and Anti-Shipping (Naval). The ASW chapters covers the Air Gap in the Atlantic, the Bay of Biscay campaign, operations in the Meditterean Sea and finally the coastal campaigns along NW Europe/Norway in the latter yrs of the war. The Anti-Shipping chapters concentrates upon a more limited geographical area but equally as interesting and even more dangerous. We see the formation of Strike Wings that tore into Axis coastal shipping and the perilous task of attacking German surface vessels-off all sizes. Chapter 7 deals with the less glamorous and even less publicised areas of Air-Sea Rescue, Photo Recon and finally Meteorological services. All of these lesser facets helped square the circle of Coastal Commands place & voice during the war.

With the final 2 chapters covering a retrospective angle and a conclusion, we are left with a plethora of some 21 Appendices, which cover and detail out the various results & consequences from the previous chapters. These alone are worth the book price alone in my opinion. The book is fully referenced & noted, with some 59 B/W photographs & illustrations, plus 3 maps to help the narrative along.

If any official history is ever wrote about Coastal Command, the this book will be heavily referenced in it, its that good.
5 stars
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2013
Very informative and full of surpises especially on equipment and on Strike Wings. It is denslet written and not a light read. As a reference it is very good, I would like to have seen more and better pictures especially of aircraft interiors, different Marks and color schemes for the key aircraft.
Very enjoyable
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2013
I was disappointed in this book, which set's out to cover a much neglected part of the war effort. Although the author obviously has a encyclopedic knowledge of his topic, the book struggles to present this knowledge to a reader in a cogent way.
The book tends to be extremely repetitive repeating the same facts and opinions over and over again, how marvelous the Hudson was, how important the 250kg depth charge was, how short of Liberators the service was etc etc. Each of these issues are important, but the author repeats them, and several other topics ad nausiem.
The book style is confusing and tends to hop about in a 'stream of consciousness' type of style that makes it quite difficult to work out what is going on. For example the author discussed the SS Manela as a depot ship for Sunderland crews in Iceland. The author then notes that there was a second depot ship SS Dumana. In the middle of describing the capacities of these two ships the author switches to describe Sunderland's operating in From Northern Ireland as preferring Loch Erne to Loch Foyle. It's not discussed if the SS Dumana was supporting these operations in Northern Ireland, or was in Iceland, or somewhere else. Similarly we leap from year to year and it's often difficult to know if we are still in 1941, or have moved on to 1943 or 1945!.
I think as a reference book this book will find considerable utility, where you just want to dip in and out to confirms some facts, it's fine. As a book that might give a reader an insight into the operations and development of Costal Command, and the men who fought there, it's messy writing style makes it too torturous to enjoy.
7 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 31, 2014
An important addition to the library of RAF histories. I have found it a bit heavy going and sometimes repetitive. However it covers the background of the efforts and politics involved in building what eventually became an effective force.
One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Steven D Nichols
4.0 out of 5 stars The Cinderella Service
Reviewed in Canada on April 23, 2015
I'm 70 percent done reading this book and find that it filled a lot of gaps in other history books. I hope that the last part of the book goes into operational encounters with the enemy and if it does, it will be all the book one needs regarding Coastal Command.
One person found this helpful
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Mr. Richard Edwards
5.0 out of 5 stars Read the info on the book before you buy it to be sure this is for you
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 3, 2015
This Book has had poor reviews from some for being to dry and full of figures and lists. Please read the info this is what this book is about the facts and figures of Coastal Commands war it can be dry but figures are it covers what happened how it happened what aircraft they did or in the early days did not have. It will show you how the service grew into the sub hunters the U Boats feared. The book was bought as a present for a man who is serious about the Sunderland flying boat he has service information and many books and DVD's this book scratched his itch. For someone who is into history this is worth the time to get into it. It does have some really interesting reports and information which the writer spent many years searching for. So enjoy the book for what it is and do read the info, if its facts and figures as well as stories you want then this takes some beating
14 people found this helpful
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Andy L
4.0 out of 5 stars Overall a very good read which fills in some of the great voids ...
Reviewed in Australia on November 21, 2014
A very interesting history of the birth and growth of Coastal Command. It came as a surprise to me at the lack of preparedness at the outbreak of war as to how Britain intended to protect its trade lanes. The progress over the war years and the eventual ability to equip Coastal Command with the right aircraft and equipment was well written and showed how conflicting priorities were managed. Also of interest is how the US took on board Coastal Command's tactics.

Overall a very good read which fills in some of the great voids in knowledge of Coastal Command's value to the Allies efforts during WWII.
2 people found this helpful
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Czarnykot
4.0 out of 5 stars Exhaustive account.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 23, 2023
This account of RAF Coastal Command during World War II is very interesting. It is an in-depth, exhaustive and detailed account of the sadly forgotten command. It is written by someone who was a member of Coastal Command. The book is well worth reading for anyone interested in WWII and aircraft. My only criticism is that the book is unnecessarily repetitive, in my opinion. Nevertheless, still worth reading…
2 people found this helpful
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Elvin Smith
3.0 out of 5 stars It reads more like a report than a history
Reviewed in Australia on April 19, 2016
Very detailed and comprehensive. It reads more like a report than a history.
One person found this helpful
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