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Edwin T. Layton (1) (1903–1984)

Author of And I Was There: Pearl Harbor and Midway--Breaking the Secrets

For other authors named Edwin T. Layton, see the disambiguation page.

1 Work 332 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: U.S. Navy, courtesy of Wikipedia Commons; http://www.navy.mil/midway/layton.html

Works by Edwin T. Layton

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Layton, Edwin T.
Legal name
Layton, Edwin Thomas
Birthdate
1903
Date of death
1984
Gender
male
Organizations
United States Navy

Members

Reviews

Finally spurred to pick this up when I saw it at Xenophile Books in Richland during a visit to the Hanford site.

It is understandable why this was posthumously published, as Layton doesn't hold back his punches.

I was surprised it took more than half the book (about 300 pages!) to arrive at the infamous day, but Layton is very careful to capture what he felt they knew at Pearl, and who should have known better.

The infighting that Layton carefully details after the attack may be an important historical record, but is difficult to slog through.… (more)
 
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kcshankd | 3 other reviews | Sep 20, 2024 |
Good account from a player in the codebreaking area.
 
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Hedgepeth | 3 other reviews | Jul 26, 2009 |
An interesting insiders account by a member of the United States Pacific Fleet staff both prior to the outbreak of the Pacific War and for the duration of the fighting. RADM Layton's writing is a fascinating insider account of the military intelligence operations and intrigues behind two of the most significant events in the first six months of the Pacific War, Pearl Harbor and Midway. As a loyal staff officer his defense of his commander, Admiral Kimmel is understandable. As the Pacific Fleet Intelligence Officer on December 7, 1941 you can not escape the idea that some of the passionate defense of Admiral Kimmel may also be in the interest of protecting his own military reputation, since the surprise attack certainly qualifies as an intelligence failure of significant proportion. Granted the collective wisdom of the defense establishment expected attacks almost anywhere in the Pacific except Hawaii and the US West Coast. Henry Clausens's Pearl Harbor Final Judgment presents a significantly less favorable light on both Admiral Kimmel and the entire command and staff operation/coordination/cooperation in the Hawaiian Department during the critical months preceding December 7, 1941.… (more)
½
1 vote
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Strangcf | 3 other reviews | Jun 27, 2009 |
"Layton knew thatthe fundamental cause ofthe Pearl Harbor disaster was Washington's failure to properly evaluate and disseminate radio intelligence information" p. 503
 
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carterchristian1 | 3 other reviews | May 25, 2011 |

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Works
1
Members
332
Popularity
#71,553
Rating
3.9
Reviews
4
ISBNs
6

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