France, 1917. [Ret.] Steven Berryhill, USAF.
Gen. --Maj.
Highly recommended.
All wrapped into an immersive read that is both poignant and tragic, humorous and irreverent.
Vengeance.
Romance.
The politics of the Royal Flying Corps and the home front.
The inflexible leadership and the inferior aircraft.
Modern knights of the air, fearlessly battling the Hun in a fight to the death? Or reluctant malcontents, not knowing if the Germans or their own generals are the real enemy? Michael Macmurdy uses his experience as a T-37 instructor pilot, as a flight lead/instructor pilot in the A-10 Warthog, and flying tail-dragger aircraft to take us into the cockpits above France in 1917.
Ian Crosse--who spends most of his time planning a run for Parliament.
Drew Harris--who thinks Britain should look to the Spartans and the Romans to deal with problems on the home front.
Harry Booth--a Liverpudlian fabric-store kid turned RFC observer.
In the skies above the trenches, the men and machines of Britain\'s Royal Flying Corps: Pete Newin--a regular bloke trying to hang on.
Of artillery and barbed wire and machine guns.
Of mud and rats and lice.
Three years of stalemate.
France, 1917