Z Special Unit: The Elite Allied World War II Guerrilla Force

Hardback Published on: 14/04/2022
Price: £25.00
Free UK delivery on orders over £25
In stock
Usually dispatched within 1-2 days
Make and edit your lists in your account
No stock available in any shop.
In stock
Usually dispatched within 1-2 days
No stock available in any shop.

Synopsis

Leading expert Gavin Mortimer tells the remarkable origin story of a wartime special forces unit that defied the odds.

Z Special Unit, one of the most intrepid but arguably the most unsung of Allied Special Forces of the Second World War waged a guerrilla war against Japan for two years in the south-west Pacific. On some of their 81 operations Z Special Unit slipped into enemy harbours in canoes and silently mined ships before vanishing into the night; on others they parachuted into the dense Borneo jungle to fight with headhunters against the Japanese and on one occasion they landed on an Indonesian island and smuggled out the pro-Allied sultan from under Japanese noses.

The Japanese weren't the only adversary that Z Special Unit encountered in the brutal terrain of the Pacific. In the mango swamps of Borneo and the dense jungle of Papua New Guinea they were faced with venomous snakes, man-eating crocodiles and deadly diseases. But it was the enemy soldiers who proved the most ruthless foe, beheading those Z Special Unit commandos who fell into their hands.

Drawing on veteran interviews as well as operational reports and recently declassified SOE files, Gavin Mortimer explores the incredible history of this remarkable special forces unit and the band of commandoes that defied the odds.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN: 9781472847096
  • Number of pages: 240
  • Dimensions: 248 x 198 x 26 mm
  • Weight: 1060g
  • Languages: English

Customer Reviews

View all
Z Special Unit
An interesting subject ruined by stodgy writing. Very well made.
These people did some really interesting things, caused lots of bother to the Japanese, and did so with very few resources and even fewer losses. Indigeno... READ MORE
Roger Lincoln