MWSA Review
Cocktails with the Admiral is an informal memoir of the service life of the late Rear Admiral Donald M. "Mac" Showers, USN(Ret), whose thirty-year career spanned the momentous period from the earliest days of World War II to the height of the Vietnam War.
RADM Showers's initial Navy assignment happened to place him at the center of the war in the Pacific with the codebreakers of Station HYPO who enabled the pivotal US victory at the Battle of Midway. His post-war career traces his evolution as a member of the developing US Naval Intelligence community. After retiring from the Navy, he spent more than a decade with the CIA and was later inducted into the NSA Hall of Honor.
The narrative is written by another retired US Naval Intelligence officer, Vic Socotra, as a series of interviews conducted with the Admiral during regular happy hour sessions at a popular Arlington restaurant/bar. First-hand accounts of his role add new footnotes to the well-established history of the conflict. The result is an entertaining and occasionally revelatory viewpoint of key strategic decisions that led to the hard-won US victory over Japan.
The admiral’s personal story also follows the post-war development and maturation of the US Navy intelligence capability and its influence on national security doctrine. Unfortunately, RADM Showers passed away in 2012 at the age of 93, before he could talk about his second career with the CIA.
The book could have benefited from another round of critical editing. Extensive descriptions of the Willow bar and its denizens detracted from the Admiral’s story, as did many of the photographs scattered throughout the text. Nonetheless, in recounting his interviews with the admiral, the author has preserved the legacy of a unique Navy career.
Review by Peter A. Young (June 2022)
Author's Synopsis
Admiral Mac Showers was the last of the Station HYPO Codebreakers at Pearl Harbor who set the stage for victory at the Battle of Midway. His life in that tumultuous conflict and later in those of the Cold War, Vietnam and Watergate make his recollections amid a 21st Century landscape a roller coaster of a vivid time. Join our 90-year old buddy who chatted with all the f-Star officers and the Queen for a unique perspective on life in the middle of the American Century.
Format(s) for review: Paper Only
Review Genre: Memoir/Biography
Number of Pages: 337