In 1942 the air defence of the northern Australian frontier town of Darwin was operated by airmen from the United States. Flying P-40E Warhawks, the pilots of the 49th Fighter Group fought a brave and innovative campaign against a stronger enemy that did much to safeguard Australia in its darkest hour.
Professor Tom Tietenberg Book order






- 2021
- 2021
Explores the battle techniques of the medieval period.
- 2020
The Empire Strikes South
- 184 pages
- 7 hours of reading
Between 1942 and 1945 the Japanese waged a relentless air war against the vast expanses of Northern Australia. Using newly translated Japanese sources the The Empire Strikes South chronicles every Japanese air mission over Northern Australia and lists 187 Japanese airmen who lost their lives.
- 2013
Carrier Attack Darwin 1942
- 368 pages
- 13 hours of reading
When Darwin was attacked nobody could have predicted the extraordinary ferocity of the 19 February 1942 raid. which hit Darwin with the biggest Japanese air attack ever in the South Pacific. Since then generations of Australians have been drawn to the stories and folklore of the Darwin action. But facts have blurred and mythology has thrived. What of the warning that never happened? What of the ghost ship actually sunk in the Atlantic a year earlier? Did a fighter pilot contrive a false combat record? Did authorities cover up the raid? Why do Australians know so little about it? This is the book that tests these many Darwin myths and reveals new information: the actual intent and nature of the attack; the precise extent of the Japanese losses. Provides a timely and fresh analysis of the raid from specially translated Japanese sources
- 2011
The Submarine Six
- 175 pages
- 7 hours of reading
Any Australian asked to mention our war heroes could probably name General Monash and Albert Jacka VC from World War I, and then Weary Dunlop, and perhaps Field Marshal Blamey from WWII. A knowledgeable few might be able to suggest Australia's greatest fighting air ace, Clive Caldwell
- 2010
Darwin'S Submarine I-124
- 182 pages
- 7 hours of reading
The first attacks on Australia by the Japanese were made by four submarines of the Sixth Submarine Squadron of the Imperial Japanese Navy. Together, these 80-man boats laid mines, and then waited in their killing zones for targets to torpedo. On 20 January 1942, it all went horribly wrong. Sunk with all hands, the submarine I-124 remains outside Darwin today, testimony to bravery but also to folly. Avonmore Books' new edition of a 1990s work features new and improved graphics, a host of photographs, and the complete story of the submarine action and events through the decades beyond - for the sunken vessel did not lie easy. Code seekers, treasure hunters, and potential salvors eventually led to the formation of the Historic Shipwrecks Act.