Book description
A Very Strange Way to Go to War tells the astonishing story of the
 Great White Whale', the luxury ocean liner turned troopship, which
was diverted from the Med to the heart of the Falklands war. Thirty
years ago, after Argentina had invaded the Falkland Islands, a Task
Force sailed from Southampton. On it was one of Britain's two flagship
ocean liners, P&O's Canberra, stopped in its tracks at Gibraltar
on its Mediterranean cruise, refitted as a troopship in a week, and
now carrying 2,000 soldiers Â- as well as almost all of its civilian
crew Â- down to the South Atlantic. Unlike the QE2 (also
requisitioned), the Canberra went all the way into San Carlos Water to
deliver its Royal Marines into battle. She was bombed ten times while
in the Falklands, becoming a hospital ship when war commenced. And
when this famously all-white boat returned, battered and rusted, to
Southampton, the port gates had been closed after 120,000 people
arrived to welcome her home. Once refurbished, she became the hot
ticket for cruise passengers around the world. Now, Andrew Vine has
interviewed the Canberra's crew and the troops who sailed on her to
tell the story of a truly remarkable episode of modern war Â- of how a
luxury liner went into the heart of battle, and ordinary men and women
found themselves on an adventure both terrifying and unforgettable.
Andrew Vine is deputy editor of the Yorkshire Post. His previous
book for Aurum was Last of the Summer Wine. He lives in Leeds