David F. Winkler is a retired Navy commander having received his commission through Penn State NROTC. Having earned his Ph.D. at American University, he served as staff historian at the Naval Historical Foundation for 25 years, has taught at the U.S. Naval Academy and Naval War College, and held the Charles Lindbergh Chair of Aerospace History at the Smithsonian. He has published five books with the Naval Institute Press and writes a monthly historical perspective column for Sea Power Magazine. He is the author of Witness to Neptune’s Inferno, based on the diary of Atlanta’s Assistant Gunnery Officer Lloyd M. Mustin.
""Winkler's account is totally fresh, using original sources to tell the tragic tale of American sailors in those desperate hours of 1942 during the initial phases of offensive operations against the Axis enemy of World War II.""--David Kohnen, author of ""King's Navy: Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King and the Rise of American Sea Power, 1897-1947"" ""This microhistory of the birth, life, and death of an American cruiser offers valuable insight into the early years of World War II, including the procedures, processes, and personnel of the Navy, naval life, and naval warfare. The account of its loss in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal is particularly gripping.""--Craig Symonds, author of ""Nimitz at War"" ""As a result of Dr. Winkler's remarkably thorough research, this account is--and will remain--the definitive history of the doomed USS Atlanta. During the combat portions of the book, his narrative crackles with such intensity that it transports readers to the decks of the cruiser and puts them right alongside her officers and enlisted men.""--Paul Stillwell, author of ""Battleship Commander: The Life of Vice Admiral Willis A. Lee Jr.""