Nearly eight hours and almost every minute spent at sea โ Mercogliano on PTO shipbuilding is the clear Pick, but Harris's Midway two-parter, McManus on Guadalcanal, Sebag-Montefiore's Arctic convoys, and Holland and Murray's Japan series make this the most naval-saturated week I can remember. Anchors aweigh, John.

Seth Paridon and Jon Parshall bring on maritime historian Sal Mercogliano to cover US Navy shipbuilding from the mid-1930s expansion through the Two Ocean Navy Act, plus the overlooked topic of at-sea fleet repair in the Pacific. Nearly two hours on the industrial backbone that actually won the war โ the kind of logistics-and-production episode that rarely gets this much airtime but absolutely deserves it. If you care about why the US could absorb losses and keep fighting while Japan couldn't, this is the one.
McManus and Hymel continue their Guadalcanal series with the grinding attrition phase โ the naval battles, Japanese reinforcement attempts, and the desperate jungle fighting after the initial landings. They draw heavily on Richard Frank's definitive account, which is always a good sign. Over an hour of properly detailed operational history covering one of the war's genuine turning points, from a historian who knows the US Army's WWII record cold.
Ray Harris Jr. gets into the opening exchanges at Midway โ Fletcher's Yorktown versus Nagumo's carriers, the mistakes on both sides, and the devastating losses. Short at 25 minutes, but this is the battle itself, and Harris's chronological approach means the intelligence and operational setup has already been laid in previous episodes. Tight and focused.
The setup episode for Midway: Yamamoto's operational plan, Nimitz's intelligence advantage (the 'Cherub' โ codebreaking), and the lingering effects of Coral Sea on both fleets' carrier strength. Harris keeps it at 30 minutes but packs in the planning and dispositions you need before the battle kicks off. A good companion to Episode 616.
Hugh Sebag-Montefiore makes the case for the Arctic convoys as a decisive campaign of the war, covering the horrors faced by merchant sailors on the Iceland-to-Russia run and the strategic importance of Lend-Lease supplies to the Soviet war effort. At 37 minutes it's necessarily compressed, but Sebag-Montefiore is a serious researcher (he wrote Enigma: The Battle for the Code) and the Arctic theatre is genuinely underserved in popular WWII coverage. A strong corrective to the usual Atlantic-centric convoy narrative.
Holland and Murray reach the point where Japanese military planners are actively gaming out how to strike the United States, with the European war reshaping calculations on both sides. Solid strategic-level material on the diplomatic endgame before Pearl Harbor.
Holland and Murray dig into how Japan's cultural distinction between public position and private intent โ honne and tatemae โ shaped the slide toward war, including the internal deadlines for breaking off negotiations with Washington. More cultural-strategic than operational, but genuinely illuminating on Japanese decision-making.
The story of John Philip Holland's submarine designed for the Irish Republican Brotherhood to use against the Royal Navy โ a genuinely odd chapter in 19th-century weapons development where revolutionary nationalism met cutting-edge naval technology. Over an hour, and Lions Led By Donkeys are in their element with military-adjacent absurdity that still has real substance.
A brief 14-minute discussion of why the upcoming Odyssey film gets Mycenaean-era military equipment wrong โ boar-tusk helmets vs. classical hoplite gear. Interesting if you care about arms and armour accuracy, but it's really film criticism with an archaeological gloss.
Explicitly drawn on in the World War 2 LIVE Guadalcanal series โ Richard Frank's work remains the go-to single volume on the campaign, covering the land, sea, and air dimensions that made the battle so uniquely grinding.
Cited in the Ancient Warfare episode picking apart the Odyssey 2026 trailer's anachronistic kit โ Connolly's reconstructions of Mycenaean-era arms and armour are the benchmark for getting Bronze Age Greece right, and a gorgeous book to boot.
The We Have Ways series on Japan's road to war โ exploring honne and tatemae, war hawks, and the collapse of negotiations โ maps closely onto Hotta's account of the Japanese decision-making process from the inside. If you want the view from Tokyo, this is where to start.