"...eye-opening reading and is of value not only for historians—professional or amateur—of the Great Pacific War, but also instructive for the modern U.S. Navy, which has exhibited a dangerous tendency to forget about its own history. Just as the Navy of the 1930s was overly focused on technology and tactics at the expense of mundane maintenance and supply considerations, so too is today’s Navy too often blinded by the bells and whistles of fancy tech. If the carrier fleet must once again sail into harm’s way, the ability to provide sustainable air power at sea might well make the difference between winning a longer conflict and losing a shorter one." —Strategy Page"Sustaining the Carrier War: The Deployment of U.S. Naval Air Power to the Pacific is the first comprehensive study on the importance of aircraft maintenance and the aircraft technician in the age of the aircraft carrier, Sustaining the Carrier War, provides the missing link to our understanding of Great Power conflict at sea. Exceptionally well written, organized and presented. Sustaining the Carrier War is informative, enhanced for the reader with the inclusion of numerous illustrations, twenty-two pages of Notes, a four page Bibliography, and a seventeen page Index. A comprehensively researched, detailed, and meticulous work of seminal scholarship, Sustaining the Carrier War is a primary and unreservedly recommended addition to personal, professional, community, college, and university library World War II American Naval Military History and Strategy collections." —Midwest Book Review “Many historians have covered the carriers, planes, and pilots engaged in the naval war in the Pacific. Now, for the first time, an historian tells the stirring tale of the recruitment, training, and work of the fourth vital element in the US Navy’s victory - the enlisted maintenance technicians who kept the planes flying.”—Kathleen Broome Williams, naval historian and author of Painting War “At the Battle of Midway, the great majority of Japanese pilots actually survived, but almost all the highly trained and skilled aircraft maintainers died, with profound negative strategic consequences. This book masterfully shows how the U.S. Navy overcame a myriad of problems to belatedly create the critical aircraft maintenance capability vital for victory.” —Rear Admiral Sam Cox, U.S. Navy (Ret.) - Naval Historian and former Commander of the Office of Naval Intelligence. “Much has been written about American carriers in WWII, but practically nothing has been produced regarding how that carrier aviation force was kept in the fight. In this unique volume, Fisher “looks under the hood” to see how the USN adapted during the war years to produce the necessary aviation techs to support the world’s mightiest carrier force.”—Jonathan Parshall, co-author, Shattered Sword, the Untold Story of the Battle of Midway "Delving deeply into unpublished unit and command histories from World War II, Dr. Fisher’s book shines a light on the under-studied and under-appreciated role of the enlisted maintainer in supporting the immense aerial armada that played such a large role in the victory over Japan."—Laurence M. Burke II, author of At the Dawn of Airpower: The U.S. Army, Navy, and Marine Corps’ Approach to the Airplane, 1907–1917 "Sustaining the Carrier War is not a book for the casual reader. There are no dramatic tales of split-second decisions or air combat against determined foes in its pages, but rather a deeply researched and well-written analysis of how the US Navy’s small pre-war aircraft carrier force was transformed into the greatest combat fleet in history. As an historian Stan Fisher has accomplished a rare feat by telling the untold story of the central role of the aircraft technicians along with the shore infrastructure that supported them in sustaining the American carrier forces that led the way to victory over Japan in the Pacific."—Sea History "Stan Fisher is a professor of Naval and American history at the US Naval Academy, Annapolis. He has a PhD from Maryland University and is a past recipient of the Samuel Eliot Morison Naval History Scholarship. Before earning these qualifications he gained a commission in the USN as a pilot through the Reserve Officer Training Corps and flew Seahawk helicopters, accumulating over 2,500 flying hours in his log book before retiring with the rank of commander. He qualified as a test pilot, weapons and tactics instructor in addition to an appointment as a squadron maintenance officer. Sustaining the Carrier War is the latest in a series of edited books entitled Studies in Naval History and Sea Power published by the US Naval Institute which examines a range of international naval topics. The subject matter of this book is important and it deserves its place in the series of studies."—Australian Naval Institute