In thirty-five chapters, The Greatest Air Aces Stories Ever Told
covers many of the leading American and British Commonwealth fighter
aces of WW I and II, together with a few bomber crews whose gallantry
made a substantial contribution to the end of WW II. Other nations had
their aces, but this book concentrates on American and Commonwealth
pilots. These aviators were chosen not only because of their
“scores” and their great courage, but also for other qualities
which set them apart, like the WWII Royal Air Force Wing Commander who
shot down more than 20 Germans while flying with two artificial legs.
Here are a few of the aces. Note that the air forces of Europe and the
United States did not always have today’s names, used here for
simplicity’s sake: Albert Ball, RAF, son of the Lord Mayor of
Nottingham, winner of the Victoria Cross. He had 44 victories in WWI
when he was killed at the age of 20, well known to his German foes,
who much admired him. Gabby Gabreski, USAF. Son of hard-working Polish
immigrants. An ace in WWII with 28 kills and later in Korea, with
another six. He was an accomplished commander, finished a long career
as a colonel. Mick Mannock, RAF. Tough and aggressive in spite of his
fear of fire, he won not only the Victoria Cross, but five other high
awards for gallantry. Highest British scorer of WWI with 73 victories,
he detested Germans, and rejoiced with every kill. He was shot down by
ground fire in the last year of the war. David McCampbell, USN. Scored
34 WWII kills to become the U.S. Navy’s all-time ace. In 1944, set
an all-time record with nine victories on a single mission. Winner of
the Congressional Medal. Pick Pickard, RAF. Led the RAF rooftop bomber
raid on Amiens Prison In WWII, freeing many underground members, some
of whom were facing death, and who were promptly spirited away by
French partisans. Frank Luke, USAF. Deadly American famous for his
busting of German observation balloons in WWI. Shot up over German
territory, he managed to land safely, but, being Luke, tried to fight
it out with enemy infantrymen with only his pistol. The book will also
touch on the equipment these aces flew, from the famous Fokkers and
Sopwith Camels to the ungainly two-seater FE2b, which was driven by a
pusher engine and looked like a bathtub with wings and a miniature oil
derrick glued on the back. Also included are our own Grumman carrier
fighters, the P-40s, the P-38s, as well as the P-51 Mustang, probably
the finest fighter of the war, a happy marriage of an American
airframe and a British engine. The deadly, graceful Spitfire has its
place, as do the Hurricane, the biplane Gladiator, and even the
four-engine Lancaster.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781493029693
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Simon & Schuster
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter