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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rare and Outstanding Soviet Memoir. A Must read, March 10, 2005
This review is from: Red Star Under the Baltic: A Soviet Submariner's Personal Account 1941-1945 (Hardcover)

The vast majority of ink spilled on WWII submarines has centered upon German U-boats and the Allied effort to defeat them. The reason is understandable: the German U-Boat campaign offers readers an impressive array of engagements, personalities, and technological advances; its geographic scope was substantial, blanketing the Atlantic Ocean from its icy northern reaches to its balmy southern climes, and around Africa's horn into the Indian Ocean; and many of its commanders and crewmen have made themselves available for interviews, commentary, and have written about their experiences.

Unfortunately, history's laser-like focus on German U-boats has made it more difficult for studies on other aspects of WWII submarine warfare (including the role American submarines in the Pacific played in defeating imperial Japan) to receive the publicity and readership they deserve. A particularly heavy shroud has covered Soviet submarine operations from 1939-1945, and the fact that this small navy helped Britain and the United States defeat Nazi Germany. Hopefully, Korzh's "Red Star under the Baltic" will buck this unfortunate and undeserved trend.

By training a mechanical engineer, Korzh served as the chief engineer on three different Soviet boats on and under the Baltic Sea. His account graphically details life and death on what many have called "a German lake." Indeed, the Baltic was an exceedingly treacherous place for enemy submarines. A quick glance a map of this region will show you why this was so. Navigationally, the long and narrow island-strewn Baltic was a complicated body of water to operate in, and its shallow depth made hiding from hunting warships doubly difficult (and in many cases, fatally impossible). When the Germans captured the Soviet bases in the central sea region early in the war, the Soviet Baltic Fleet retreated northeast to Kronstadt and Leningrad. The Kriegsmarine did its best to bottle these submarines up in the narrow reaches of the Gulf of Finland, and blanketed the narrow entrance with a nearly impenetrable anti-submarine defensive network of tens of thousands of mines, anti-submarine nets, shore-based artillery, surface warships, and air cover.

"Red Star" was written in the early 1960s, when the events portrayed were still reasonably fresh in the author's mind, and originally published in Russian in 1966 under the title "Reserve of Strength." Presented in the first person, Korzh's superb record details the abysmal life and death conditions Soviet sailors endured on their primitive but stoutly constructed boats.

As readers will quickly discover, Korzh was one lucky sailor. His first patrol in early 1942 was aboard S-7, which returned safely only to be torpedoed by a Finnish submarine on its next patrol. The entire crew was lost except for those fortunate enough to have been on the bridge when disaster struck. Korzh, however, was not aboard because he had been transferred to another boat, S-12. His extensive second patrol sank two freighters and returned safely after suffering heavy depth charging and a very narrow escape. S-12 was lost with its entire crew the following year, but the lucky Korzh had again been posted to third boat, jumping again off the devil's shovel. His third patrol in March 1945 was aboard L-21, a large mine-laying submarine. The patrol was exceedingly successful and accounted for three warships and a tanker.

"Red Star" will interest everyone who enjoys reading about WWII naval matters in general, and U-boats in particular. Authentic Russian accounts of naval service are very rare, and memoirs in a frontline submarine exceedingly so. Everyone familiar with Das Boot and life aboard German U-boats will appreciate and see obvious similarities between that account and Korzh's recollections: hardship, terror, comradeship, and death. German accounts of life aboard a U-boat in 1944 and 1945, when simply going to sea was the equivalent of a death sentence, are rare because so few crewmen from that period managed to survive. It was under similar conditions that Korzh and his comrades operated from 1942 onward in the dangerous waters of the Baltic. Viktor Korzh died in St Petersburg in 1993. "Red Star under the Baltic" is his legacy. Thankfully, it is now available in English. I highly recommend it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An historic account of a little known submarine war., March 27, 2005
By 
Ned Middleton (British professional underwater photo-journalist & author) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Red Star Under the Baltic: A Soviet Submariner's Personal Account 1941-1945 (Hardcover)
Although this book was first published in Russia some 40 years ago, this the first English translation. Written by a distinguished former Soviet submariner, it is a moving, vivid and first-hand account of life in the submarine service of the USSR during the bleak years of WW2. The author died in 1993.

Greatly feared by the Germans, I found it fascinating to learn how they employed extensive counter-measures to ensure the entire Soviet Fleet was kept bottled up. In this way German U-Boats were then able to strike at allied and even neutral shipping with impunity. Then we learn how, in 1943, all that began to change as the Allies learned how to strike back at their, hitherto unseen, enemy.

For those with an interest in the war at sea, it is very easy to become so preoccupied with U-Boats and the North Atlantic campaign that the struggles undergone by our Soviet Allies (as they were at that time) are completely overlooked. The involvement of Finnish Forces on the side of Germany (Finland eventually withdrew from the War in 1944) was an additional threat of which I previously knew very little.

Altogether a fascinating, well written and worthwhile book which, for me at least, has opened up a whole new area of interest in the war at sea during 1939-1945.

NM

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Baltic Fleet submarine duty, July 23, 2011
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This review is from: Red Star Under the Baltic: A Soviet Submariner's Personal Account 1941-1945 (Hardcover)
Execelent account of service in Baltic Fleet submarines during WW II. The author was a dedicated communist citizen who at least on the surface mirrored all the Soviet propaganda about the joys of Communist life. As an example he notices one day while on patrol that it is the second anniversary of Latvia joining the USSR and an occasion for celebration. In reality, after Joseph Stalin signed a secret treaty with Adolph Hitler, that allowed Germany to attack Poland without fear of any Soviet interference, the USSR then moved into Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia and forcibly incorporated them into the Soviet Union - not much occasion for celebration on the part of the Latvians at all. Nevertheless, the details of life and operations in several Baltic Fleet submarines are fascinating to this former U.S. submarine officer.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Rare Look at Submarine Warfare from the Soviet Perspective, November 18, 2005
By 
AdvanceBookReviews.com (Sunnyvale, California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Red Star Under the Baltic: A Soviet Submariner's Personal Account 1941-1945 (Hardcover)
The vast majority of books on WWII submarines focus on German U-boats and Battle of the Atlantic. "Red Star under the Baltic: A Firsthand Account of Life on board a Soviet Submarine in World War 2," by Viktor Korzh offers a completely fresh examination into a virtually unknown aspect of WWII submarine warfare: life inside a soviet combat boat.

"Red Star" was written in the early 1960s, when the events portrayed were still reasonably fresh in the author's mind, and published in Russian in 1966 under the title "Reserve of Strength." Korzh was the chief engineer on three Soviet boats operating on the exceedingly treacherous Baltic Sea. The narrow and shallow body of water was a deathtrap for submarines. Korzh's superb memoir details the abysmal life and death conditions Soviet sailors endured on their primitive but stoutly constructed boats. Some of the events Korzh was exceedingly lucky. Two boats he left were each sunk on their next patrol. "Red Star" will interest everyone who enjoys reading about WWII naval matters in general, and U-boats in particular.

Authentic Russian accounts of naval service are very rare, and memoirs in a frontline submarine exceedingly so. Everyone familiar with "Das Boot" and life aboard German U-boats will appreciate and see obvious similarities between that account and Korzh's recollections: hardship, terror, comradeship, and death. Korzh died in St Petersburg in 1993. "Red Star under the Baltic: A Firsthand Account of Life on board a Soviet Submarine in World War 2," by Viktor Korzh. ISBN 1-844151-38-7 (Pen & Sword), photos, hardcover, d.j. 224 pages. Recommended.
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