From Fort Custer to the Coral Sea—one soldier’s long journey home. The WWII Diary of Captain George B. Spero is a candid, pictorial memoir that fuses firsthand testimony with rare wartime ephemera. Forget the Hollywood version—this is World War II through the eyes of a no-nonsense anti-aircraft captain: sardine-packed troop transports, endless rumor mills, tropical illnesses, lifeboat drills, and the slow grind of bureaucracy. From Rio to Townsville to Horn Island, Spero offers a front-row seat to the Pacific Theater’s forgotten corners—captured in real-time reflections and historic photos. When Captain George B. Spero boarded the Queen Mary in 1942, he carried more than a duffel bag—he smuggled aboard a forbidden diary. The result is a vivid account of daily life at war: the boredom and tension, the dark humor and homesickness, rendered with sharp clarity and dry wit. This is living history—unfiltered and unvarnished—from a man who saw it firsthand. More than a diary, this book is a powerful meditation on duty, disillusionment, and endurance. Whether read by historians, descendants of the Greatest Generation, or curious newcomers, The WWII Diary of Captain George B. Spero is both a classroom-ready artifact and a lasting family legacy. Born Yeoryios Vasilios Spiridakos in Sparta, Greece on August 17th, 1915, George Spero arrived at the Port of New York in New York City on May 30th, 1928 alongside his family. The family settled in Allegan, Michigan where George first met Maxine, his wife of 60 years, while in the eighth grade. After high school George attended Michigan State University where he received a Masters degree in Chemistry in 1940. Shortly thereafter he married Maxine and spent four years of active duty fighting in WWII. After returning from the war George Spero took a job as chemist for a Kalamazoo, Michigan based pharmaceutical manufacturer called Upjohn Company. For his 32 years of service George holds a total of 29 patents, helping to usher in some truly monumental breakthroughs in medicine. Among his greatest achievements are the inventions of Cortisone, the first arthritic drug, the first pre-menstrual cramp drug and the first anabolic steroid to help cancer patients survive chemotherapy. In the late 1940's and early 1950's George Spero took on construction and built the home that he and Maxine would raise their children in and live in until the time of his death in 2001. Avid about travel and photography, George and Maxine traveled throughout Europe, Australia, the Middle East, Central America and the United States, documenting it through photographs and slide film. An ardent academic, besides his Master's in chemistry, George Spero also went on to receive his Patent Law degree, a Master's in archeology and to take art classes in his 80's to learn to paint Greek landscapes. Additionally, he was a self-taught genealogist and Biblical scholar.