This book continues where author Gailey's "MacArthur Strikes Back - Decision at Buna New Guinea 1942-1943" leaves off and covers the remainder of the New Guinea campaign during 1943 through most of 1944. There is little new in Gailey's works, but the coverage is relatively good and thorough at the regimental level and above. I recommend it be read in conjunction with Holzimmer's "General Walter Krueger" for a view from Krueger's standpoint and Morison's "Breaking the Bismarcks Barrier" for a treatise from the Navy's side.
The book serves best an an introduction to the campaign since it is written from a rather high level. Surprisingly, the Japanese command problems are present in as much detail as the American, and the Japanese lack of good intelligence versus the American sources through Ultra are in sharp contrast to each other. Sometimes one wonders how well Krueger and MacArthur would have done without Ultra or how well the Japanese would have done with almost any intelligence at all.
General Kenney is given well-deserved kudos by the author, and in many respects his advice on strategy determined the campaign. MacArthur consistently took the most aggressive strategy possible, particularly in the early days when he possessed little naval or air support. His problem was that he was building to a liberation of the Philippines, something considered in naval circles to be unnecessary. History has not yet decided this issue as the central Pacific campaign was undoubtedly decisive, but not liberating the Philippines might have had many undesirable political consequences for the US.
Interestingly, the first half of the New Guinea campaign was fought by Australians and the last half by Americans. The command problems this presented are mentioned, but the author fails to mention the American attitudes toward Allied mixed commands was formed by seeing the disaster of the ABDA command in the Southwest Pacific.
Unfortunately for the 750,000 men who were there, the entire New Guinea campaign after the securing of Port Morseby was almost superfluous. Certainly it has been largely ignored by historians concentrating on the Army's campaigns in Europe and the Marines in the Central Pacific. The Army's role on Saipan has been largely discounted due to the Smith vs Smith controversy, and only Okinawa has received much coverage, possibly due to the death there of Ernie Pyle and the Navy's losses from the Kamikaze attacks. One almost senses the author's agreement with this in that he fails to go down to the unit level except for a very few ancedotes. The fighting man is pretty well ignored in this book, even when he is attacking an island without numerical superiority and with little naval assistance. He was forced to suffer and die while higher-ups were pulling or conserving manpower for future operations to maintain a schedule.
In spite of the mistakes and flaws in the campaign, MacArthur achieved the greatest victory in World War II (from the Allied side) with the fewest casualties on New Guinea -- an achievement rarely mentioned by historians and writers focusing on Patton, Truscott, Clark, etc. And this was accomplished with almost the lowest priority of any theater (the CBI was lower) for manpower, supplies and support. MacArthur's men improvised, and the construction battalions accomplished almost unbelievable feats under very adverse conditions.
The book is in need of better proof-reading (Saidor is on the north side of the Huon Peninsula, not on the south), and the maps are virtually worthless. I found myself continually referring back to the few maps to see where a village or terrain feature was located only to find it not on the maps. I understand that the author normally has to pay someone to produce the maps, but it would be nice if someone would cough up the money once in a while. Almost in every review I write on military campaigns I criticize the lack or usefulness of the maps. Unfortunately, this book is no exception.
In short, this is a moderately good book lacking depth. Another 600 pages would have been nice, and then perhaps one could call the coverage definitive. Frankly, this doesn't do it at any level, so although I recommend the book, I'm still looking for one with adequate coverage on this campaign.