Welcome to my first book review, Gary Slaughter’s Sea Stories - A Memoir of a Naval Officer (1956-1967)
Gary Slaughter's Sea Stories |
When I got in my hands on the Sea Stories (released on Sep 4, 2016), my
first thought was that this book was mainly about the Cuban Missile Crisis
and the role of a former US naval officer before and after this dramatic event.
But it wasn’t about that. More precisely, it was not only about that. The book
was much more entertaining and interesting than I had in my mind based on the brief description
on the book, the information available on author’s website or events that were highlighting
this true episode. This is just one story emphasized in the book, one of the 60
(!) vignettes comprising the 298-page Sea Stories; motivational, uplifting stories and life lessons. Furthermore, stories
that show new insights into everyday life on the Cold War front line and the life
of a US Navy officer in the ‘60s.
But who is Gary Slaughter? Gary
Slaughter served for eleven years in the US Navy as a midshipman (officer
cadet) and naval officer. Following his distinguishing Navy service, he became an expert on
managing corporate information technology. He traveled extensively,
lecturing and consulting to clients in the United States and abroad. In
2002, he put his career on hold and began to write the Cottonwood series, five award-winning novels, depicting life in the US during World War II. During his naval career, he served aboard two of the three destroyers that
surfaced soviet submarines during the Cuban Missile Crisis. The most
significant moment during his naval career was his role in dissuading the
Captain of a Soviet Foxtrot class submarine (B-59), from unleashing his T-5 nuclear
torpedo which most certainly would have triggered a nuclear war between the
Soviet Union and USA and their allies. This incident was the closest that the Soviet Union and the United
States ever came to having an exchange of nuclear weapons. However, the event was classified as Top Secret under the terms of an agreement
between Premier Khrushchev and President Kennedy that ended the crisis.
Α dramatic
story that was kept secret until 2002; thanks to the few men whose lips remained
sealed for 40 years! The event
was finally declassified when his story was revealed in Peter
Huchthausen's 2002 book, October Fury. Since then, four documentary
filmmakers sought Gary Slaughter's participation in developing a film to celebrate
the 50th anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis. He selected Bedlam
Productions, whose movie, The King's Speech, won the 2010 Best Picture
Academy Award. Fittingly, the Bedlam documentary was entitled The Man Who Saved the World. He was also interviewed and filmed for the BBC
documentary, The Silent War.