Battlefields of the South Pacific (Hardback)
Revisiting Guadalcanal, New Guinea, and Rabaul
Pages: 200
Illustrations: 32 mono illustrations
ISBN: 9781036185046
Published: 30th October 2026
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In late summer 1942, the Pacific War balanced on a knife’s edge. Japan’s sprawling empire seemed unassailable, yet on a chain of remote islands south of the equator, the tide began to turn.
The US Marines struck first at Guadalcanal in the Solomons, where the fate of the Pacific cantered on a single prize: the Japanese airbase at what became known as Henderson Field. Control of this airstrip meant control of the southwest Pacific – and the lifeline to Australia.
For six savage months the battle raged. Marines and Army units fought in jungles, ravines, crocodile-haunted rivers, and across kunai-grass hills, quickly learning that the Japanese would fight to the death rather than surrender.
As American troops clung to Henderson Field, the struggle shifted north to New Guinea, where the land itself was an enemy. Along the jagged ridges of the Owen Stanley Mountains, Australian soldiers made their stand on the mud-choked Kokoda Trail, the only passable route across the range.
Beyond loomed Rabaul – Japan’s South Pacific fortress and the heart of its power in the Solomons. Its tunnels and batteries formed a bristling citadel, garrisoned with over 100,000 military personnel. Too strong to storm, Rabaul instead became the target of unrelenting American air raids.
Packed with photographs, the author retraces the decisive campaigns around Guadalcanal, New Guinea, and Rabaul, battles that shaped the course of the war in the South Pacific. These were contests fought at the far edge of supply lines and human endurance. The author walks jungle trails, dives among wrecks, and explores ruined command posts where echoes of fire and fury still linger. The landscapes themselves bear the scars of the moment when the Allies seized the initiative – when the thunder of war rolled northward, unstoppable, until it crashed upon the shores of Imperial Japan.
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About Chris Hulme
Inspired by a lifelong fascination with the Pacific War, CHRIS HULME has travelled extensively across the region, exploring landscapes, shipwrecks, and communities still marked by conflict. Blending the immediacy of first-hand exploration with vivid historical storytelling, his work captures both the drama of struggles that shaped the fate of empires and the resilience of the people and places where the echoes of war endure. His highly acclaimed previous non-fiction book, Manslaughter United, chronicled a year with a prison football team of inmates serving life sentences.
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Shortly after the surprise bombing of Pearl Harbor in late 1941, over 70,000 American and Filipino servicemen were captured by the Japanese in the Philippines. What ensued for these young men is considered by many military historians to be one of the most barbaric sequences of war crimes in history, yet it remains an incredibly inspiring story of unmatched heroism and survival. According to the Japanese code of Bushido, a soldier captured alive had dishonoured himself and his country, so their new prisoners were often regarded with utter contempt. Second Lieutenant Patrick Rafferty and his fellow…
By Chad GodfreyClick here to buy both titles for £38.75






