Promoting the study of military history through the art of tabletop miniature wargaming

Devil’s Fire Southern Cross

.

.

by Jeffrey R. Cox.

Hardback (6.3×9.5 inches). 502 pages. 2025.

Subtitle: The Conclusion of the Guadalcanal-Solomons Campaign October 1943-February 1944

In movies, when a character faces the camera and talks to the audience, it’s called breaking the fourth wall. This book breaks the fourth wall with the readers and it is exceptionally distracting.

It started early and I shrugged the asides off until the following sentence compared the toughness of the B-17 and B-24: The B-17 could “lose all four engines, both wings, the vertical stabilizer, the hull, the hydraulics, the radio, the air conditioning, the cigarette lighter, and the lower lumbar support and still return safely.” (p24)

If that had been a direct quote from a crewman, all’s well. As an aside, it’s over the top — and it never stops, appearing on just about every other page, if not every page. Some others:

“A convoy of that many transports is not out there for fun. Well, it could be, but probably not, and it was not the reason here.” (p49)

“One shell even struck Admiral Merrill’s flagship Montpelier, drenching the exposed gunners and wrecking his favorite typewriter. The bastards.” (p51)

A couple of these scattered through the book would be fine, but page after page of these, including, and I kid you not, “wisecracking” references to Monty Python, Buckaroo Banzai, Lord of the Rings, Smokey and the Bandit, and other cultural touchstones reduce the otherwise fine prose to distraction. No wise. Just cracking the flow of the prose like the Silence forming a crack marring a smooth wall at the Eleventh Hour. See what I did there? My Dr. Who aside works just like his: not at all.

I don’t remember such dross in his previous books. I picked up another of Cox’s volumes, Blazing Star Setting Sun, and randomly read a dozen pages in the middle. Same attention to detail. Same analysis of quantity and quality of forces. Same riveting battle descriptions. Not a single distracting aside.

One typo: “headvictorious” (p153) needs a space.

The book contains 21 black and white photos and five black and white maps.

Did Cox get bored? Did an editor suggest punching up his prose with these distracting asides? Did he get distracted and write this while doom-scrolling on his phone? I have no idea but it backfired with me. Oh, I soldiered through the text, his top-notch research propelling me onward even as I cringed every other page.

Apparently, past results don’t indicate future performance. He doesn’t need such gimmicks to write fascinating and well-researched history. The dozen pages from that previous book brought me right into that history, action, and consequences.

This time, ties go to the author. Next time? Lose the asides. Stick with your excellent analysis and commentary.

Enjoyed it.

— Reviewed by Russ Lockwood

 

Share:

Article Categories
Recent Posts
Book Reviews

China’s Fighter for the World: Volume 2

. . by Holger Muller. Softcover (8.3×11.8 inches). 78 pages. 2025. Subtitle: Technology at War 10 Subtitle: The F-7/FT-7 Family Volume 2: World-Wide Service Volume 1 covers design and development, but Volume 2 covers deployment with various air forces around the world. Country by country, F-7 and variant purchases and

Read More »
Book Reviews

Operation Power Pack: Volume 1

. . by Helio Higuchi and Antonio Luis Sapienza Fracchia. Softcover (8.3×11.8 inches). 80 pages. 2025. Subtitle: Civil War in the Dominican Republic 1965 Subtitle: Latin America at War 49 Lt. Col. Rafael Trujillio launched a successful coup and ruled the Dominican Republic as your typical dictator through the 1950s

Read More »
Book Reviews

Hitler’s War Against Poland’s Partisans

. . by Antonio J. Munoz. Hardback (6.3×9.5 inches). 306 pages. 2025. Subtitle: The Battle Behind the Eastern Front 1939-1945 Who knew Polish partisans were so many and so active once the country fell to the Germans in 1939…but they were and the Germans were forced to send more and

Read More »
Secret Link

Contact an Individual

Please select the individual you wish to email.

Contact HMGS

Please only use this form if you can’t use one of the other Contact Us links.

Contact Outreach

Please only use this form to communicate with the Outreach volunteers.

Contact Membership support

Please only use this form to communicate with the Membership volunteers.

Contact Information Technology

Please only use this form to communicate with the Information Technology volunteers.

Contact Fall In! Exhibitors Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Fall In! volunteers.

Contact Fall In! Events Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Fall In! volunteers.

Contact Fall In!

Please only use this form to communicate with the Fall In! volunteers.

Contact Cold Wars Exhibitor Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Cold Wars volunteers.

Contact Cold Wars Events Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Cold Wars volunteers.

Contact Cold Wars

Please only use this form to communicate with the Cold Wars team.

Contact Historicon Exhibitors Manager

Please only use this form to communicate with the Historicon Exhibitors Manager.

Contact Historicon Events

Please only use this form to communicate with the Historicon Events Manager.

Contact Historicon

Please only use this form to communicate with the Historicon team.

Contact Convention Operations

Please only use this form to communicate with the Convention Operations volunteers.

Contact Marketing & Communications

Please only use this form to communicate with the Marketing & Communications volunteers.

Report a Website Issue