In 1916 William James served as Executive Officer on board the ill-fated battlecruiser HMS Queen Mary and left the ship the day before she sailed to her destruction at the Battle of Jutland (31 May-June 1 1916). James went on to become one of the major figures in the twentieth century Royal Navy, famed for his work in naval intelligence and rising to the rank of full Admiral in 1938 before retiring to pen a series of acclaimed works of naval history and strategy.
Brian Lavery is one of Britain’s leading naval historians and a prolific author. A Curator Emeritus at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, and a renowned expert on the sailing navy and the Royal Navy, in 2007 he won the prestigious Desmond Wettern Maritime Media Award. His naval writing was further honoured in 2008 with the Society of Nautical Research’s Anderson Medal. His recent titles include Ship (2006), Royal Tars (2010), Conquest of the Ocean (2013), In Which They Served (2008), Churchill’s Navy (2006), and the Sunday Times bestseller Empire of the Seas (2010). Brian lives in London.