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The Tiger’s Revenge
Enhanced Edition
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Pub Date
Aug 28 2025
| Archive Date
Sep 25 2025
Description
Since the end of the Second World War, the audacious Operation Jaywick has remained little known amongst the public or military in the United Kingdom. It was an incredible endeavour executed by British and Australian service personnel. The deepest surface waterborne penetration behind enemy occupied lines undertaken by special forces of WW2. This hand- picked band of men would achieve what some thought to be impossible, a major strike at the very heart of the Japanese in their newly acquired Empire in South East Asia. This story ranks and deserves the same acknowledgement as exploits such as the Dambusters or the Cockleshell Heroes.
In the words of British Generals and US Admirals and Commanders it achieved what everyone thought was impossible, without loss and with the minimum expenditure of resources. A terrible twist in the tale is that by not using the success of the mission as a propaganda victory, as had been intended by Jaywick’s commanders, a terrible price was paid by local Singaporeans who were scapegoated by the Japanese Secret Police. This is perhaps the reason that Operation Jaywick was never hailed with the success it truly deserved. The highly effective delivery of Operation Jaywick gave a green light to an even more ambitious endeavour from which no British or Australian personnel would survive, many being executed, beheaded by their Japanese captors. The Tiger’s Revenge is the story told by the son of a special forces crew member who was the only post WW2 British survivor of Operation Jaywick.
Since the end of the Second World War, the audacious Operation Jaywick has remained little known amongst the public or military in the United Kingdom. It was an incredible endeavour executed by...
Description
Since the end of the Second World War, the audacious Operation Jaywick has remained little known amongst the public or military in the United Kingdom. It was an incredible endeavour executed by British and Australian service personnel. The deepest surface waterborne penetration behind enemy occupied lines undertaken by special forces of WW2. This hand- picked band of men would achieve what some thought to be impossible, a major strike at the very heart of the Japanese in their newly acquired Empire in South East Asia. This story ranks and deserves the same acknowledgement as exploits such as the Dambusters or the Cockleshell Heroes.
In the words of British Generals and US Admirals and Commanders it achieved what everyone thought was impossible, without loss and with the minimum expenditure of resources. A terrible twist in the tale is that by not using the success of the mission as a propaganda victory, as had been intended by Jaywick’s commanders, a terrible price was paid by local Singaporeans who were scapegoated by the Japanese Secret Police. This is perhaps the reason that Operation Jaywick was never hailed with the success it truly deserved. The highly effective delivery of Operation Jaywick gave a green light to an even more ambitious endeavour from which no British or Australian personnel would survive, many being executed, beheaded by their Japanese captors. The Tiger’s Revenge is the story told by the son of a special forces crew member who was the only post WW2 British survivor of Operation Jaywick.
A Note From the Publisher
Evan Morris is the son of Ron Morris the only British survivor, post WW2, of Operation Jaywick. Evan served for 36 years in the Fire and Rescue Service. He has been a regular author in issues relating to Fire and Rescue, Community Safety and strategic policing issues. He served for seven years as Chairman of Cheshire Police Watchdog. In 2004 Evan was awarded an MBE from Queen Elizabeth.
Evan Morris is the son of Ron Morris the only British survivor, post WW2, of Operation Jaywick. Evan served for 36 years in the Fire and Rescue Service. He has been a regular author in issues...
A Note From the Publisher
Evan Morris is the son of Ron Morris the only British survivor, post WW2, of Operation Jaywick. Evan served for 36 years in the Fire and Rescue Service. He has been a regular author in issues relating to Fire and Rescue, Community Safety and strategic policing issues. He served for seven years as Chairman of Cheshire Police Watchdog. In 2004 Evan was awarded an MBE from Queen Elizabeth.
Available Editions
| EDITION |
Ebook |
| ISBN |
9781806340972 |
| PRICE |
£7.99 (GBP)
|
| PAGES |
160
|
Available on NetGalley
NetGalley Reader
(EPUB)
NetGalley Shelf App
(EPUB)
Send to Kindle (EPUB)
Send to Kobo (EPUB)
Download (EPUB)
Additional Information
Available Editions
| EDITION |
Ebook |
| ISBN |
9781806340972 |
| PRICE |
£7.99 (GBP)
|
| PAGES |
160
|
Available on NetGalley
NetGalley Reader
(EPUB)
NetGalley Shelf App
(EPUB)
Send to Kindle (EPUB)
Send to Kobo (EPUB)
Download (EPUB)
Average rating from 1 member
Featured Reviews
PETER C, Reviewer
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
Operation Jaywick, a strange name for one of the most audacious Special Forces missions in WW2. A small group of men sailed from Australia, executing the longest waterborne operation in history. They sailed through Japanese-held waters in a flimsy wooden boat called Krait, enabling three two-man teams of soldiers to penetrate the harbours of Singapore, sinking a number of vital ships.
The mission was a complete success with immense propaganda potential, but unbelievably, it was kept secret from the outside world. As a consequence, thousands of innocent Singaporeans and allied soldiers were brutally tortured and executed by the Japanese Secret Police, who were trying to find the saboteurs.
From a personal perspective, I particularly appreciated the fact that the author is the son of one of the team members who survived the war. He has undertaken extensive research and is to be highly commended for writing such an insightful book about a little-known yet important mission. I loved the poignant photographs of the young warriors.
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
Featured Reviews
PETER C, Reviewer
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
Operation Jaywick, a strange name for one of the most audacious Special Forces missions in WW2. A small group of men sailed from Australia, executing the longest waterborne operation in history. They sailed through Japanese-held waters in a flimsy wooden boat called Krait, enabling three two-man teams of soldiers to penetrate the harbours of Singapore, sinking a number of vital ships.
The mission was a complete success with immense propaganda potential, but unbelievably, it was kept secret from the outside world. As a consequence, thousands of innocent Singaporeans and allied soldiers were brutally tortured and executed by the Japanese Secret Police, who were trying to find the saboteurs.
From a personal perspective, I particularly appreciated the fact that the author is the son of one of the team members who survived the war. He has undertaken extensive research and is to be highly commended for writing such an insightful book about a little-known yet important mission. I loved the poignant photographs of the young warriors.
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars
5 stars