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The Flight of the Phoenix

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No way out ...

Twelve men survived the crash when a blinding, unexpected sandstorm sent their Skytruck air freighter plummeting to the Earth. Now they are in Hell, stranded and alone in the empty wastes of the Sahara, facing a slow, agonizing death under the unrelenting Libyan sun. Two of them have the skills to avert a terrible fate: the brilliant, obsessed engineer Stringer, and the tormented pilot Towns. Bitter enemies, they must now work together to build an impossible dream from the wreckage and fly it to freedom ... if madness, rage, suspicion, and the merciless desert don't destroy them first.

This is a story so riveting it inspired two major motion pictures -- the memorable 1965 film starring Jimmy Stewart and the 2004 film starring Dennis Quaid.

Audiobook

First published January 1, 1964

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379 people want to read

About the author

Elleston Trevor

134 books25 followers
Author has published other books under the names: Adam Hall, Mansell Black, Trevor Burgess, Trevor Dudley-Smith, Roger Fitzalan, Howard North, Simon Rattray, Warwick Scott, Caesar Smith, Lesley Stone.

Author Trevor Dudley-Smith was born in Kent, England on February 17, 1920. He attended Yardley Court Preparatory School and Sevenoaks School. During World War II, he served in the Royal Air Force as a flight engineer. After the war, he started writing full-time. He lived in Spain and France before moving to the United States and settling in Phoenix, Arizona. In 1946 he used the pseudonym Elleston Trevor for a non-mystery book, and later made it his legal name. He also wrote under the pseudonyms of Adam Hall, Simon Rattray, Mansell Black, Trevor Burgess, Roger Fitzalan, Howard North, Warwick Scott, Caesar Smith, and Lesley Stone. Even though he wrote thrillers, mysteries, plays, juvenile novels, and short stories, his best-known works are The Flight of the Phoenix written as Elleston Trevor and the series about British secret agent Quiller written as Adam Hall. In 1965, he received the Edgar Allan Poe Award by Mystery Writers of America and the French Grand Prix de Littérature Policière for The Quiller Memorandum. This book was made into a 1967 movie starring George Segal and Alec Guinness. He died of cancer on July 21, 1995.

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5 stars
205 (29%)
4 stars
291 (41%)
3 stars
160 (22%)
2 stars
37 (5%)
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7 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 92 reviews
Profile Image for Quirkyreader.
1,629 reviews7 followers
September 4, 2017
I saved this book off the discard pile and went into it blind.

This book turned out to be a fast paced action story that starts with a plane crash in the Lybian dessert and goes from there. Who survives and who doesn't.

If you can find this book give it a go. It is a pleasant way to spend an afternoon.
1,101 reviews18 followers
July 14, 2023
I found this story fascinating, supposedly based on a true event a group of oil company workers aboard a plane crash in the.Mongolian desert. The plane is beyond fixing and the men are stranded with very little In the way of supplies. With no hope of rescue either. The men try a few ideas for rescue but these come to nothing and there's a gripping scene involving smugglers. But by far the best of the books are the characters and there are not enough superlative s to describe the ingenious and imaginative solution the group finds for their survival..................
Profile Image for Bill.
1,955 reviews110 followers
July 23, 2012
My first experience with The Flight of the Phoenix was seeing the original movie version which was released in 1965, starring James Stewart and Richard Attenborough. It's always been one of my favourites, a battle against the harsh desert after a plane crash in a sand storm. At the time I had no idea it was based on a novel. While in Dubai back in 2005, the remake starring Dennis Quaid came out and for all that it was glitzier, I enjoyed it again. Since then I've seen the original and the remake a couple of times more. It's a movie you can sit and enjoy more than once. Lucky for me, while attending a local book fair a couple of years ago, I discovered that the movies had been based on a book, written by Elleston Trevor, aka Trevor Dudley Smith. Needless to say I purchased it to see how it compared to the movies that followed the book. Well, I wasn't disappointed in the least. The movies were very respectful of the book, it's tone, it's characterization. Excellent story, suspenseful, well-paced and well-crafted. For those who might not have seen the movie, or read the book, the story is about a group of oil well workers being flown out of their camp by an old pilot. The plane is caught in a sand storm and crashes in the Libyan desert. One of the passengers is a somewhat mad aircraft designer who tells the others they can rebuild the plane from the wreckage and fly out. With the chances of rescue very slim, due to the plane flying off course during the storm, the rest of the passengers come around to the idea. The book deals with the friction between the pilot, Frank Towns and the designer, Stringer and other tests of will in a superb fashion. There are some twists and turns and surprises and I won't ruin them. Suffice it to say, the story is timeless, excellent and well worth the read. Or check out either of the movies, both excellent in their own way.
Profile Image for Dwayne Roberts.
431 reviews51 followers
August 1, 2021
A plane crashes in the Libyan desert. Its crew struggle to survive and return to civilization. Their only hope is to build a scaled-down working airplane from the wreck. The captain staggers under the weight of the deaths that occurred. Can the seemingly unfeeling passenger really design The Phoenix and lead its construction?

A powerful and inspirational story.
Profile Image for Donna.
4,494 reviews155 followers
March 9, 2018
I really enjoyed this book and now I feel like I need to track down the movie and watch it. It had a great pace and it was suspenseful. The characters were also great and the monkey was a nice touch (so were the buzzards and the Bedouins) . I liked how they all interacted and how they remained true to their roles. I loved that. The author captured the different relationships well. So 4 stars.
Profile Image for Amene.
788 reviews84 followers
June 24, 2018
با اینکه تم تکراری داشت ولی من به عنوان یک نمایش رادیویی دهه ی پنجاه گوش دادم که خوب بود. صدای شهلا ریاحی و ایرج جنتی عطایی و ثریا قاسمی جوان.
از سایت ایران صدا گوش بدین.
Profile Image for Vicky Hunt.
961 reviews95 followers
August 1, 2021
A Gripping Tale of Survival and Courage

The author, Trevor Dudley-Smith, was a man of many pen names, Elleston Trevor being the name this most beloved classic was penned under. (He is also the author of the well known Quiller Memorandum. That is a spy novel that begins a whole series.) This book is a novel set in the Central Libyan Desert. The Flight of the Phoenix is the fictional novel about a senior pilot, aging and refusing to adapt to changing tech, who gets caught in a sandstorm with 13 other men aboard his craft over the Sahara. What follows is the struggle between the Pilot and a young engineer who designs a smaller plane from the pieces of the wreckage. While this is the chief conflict, there are smaller scale conflicts between the other men, and the overriding battle with sun, sand, and dehydration.

With themes of human weakness, pride, ego, strengths vs. weakness, love, hatred, anger, and of course a determination to live against all odds, the book will take you on a journey across roiling sand dunes into the darkness and light of the human soul. You may find that the goodness in each man is more startling than his darkness.

I enjoyed this Kindle book with the Audible whisper-sync. I read it in preparation for watching the 1965 James Stewart movie, followed by the 2004 movie starring Dennis Quaid. I'm looking forward to seeing these two tonight on Amazon Prime. A few quotes from the book follow.

"This machine had the power of bestowing on them another thirty, fifty years of life"

"The heart is airborne before the airplane."

"A first-class pilot had gone on flying, failing his conversion tests and turning his back on the big main-schedule routes, accepting short-haul work because he had to live in the air;"

"only a brain like his could build a machine like the Phoenix in this region of hell and give them all a chance of getting out."


Profile Image for Ben Boulden.
Author 14 books30 followers
May 16, 2023
The Flight of the Phoenix is a masterpiece of survival fiction. The author deftly, without causing reader confusion, changes perspective from one character to another. The fear, anger, and the disquiet of the characters is captured perfectly. The animosity between the pilot and the aircraft designer is well crafted. Phoenix is a wonderfully character-driven, but well-plotted, novel of a certain age.
Profile Image for Mike Jennings.
327 reviews3 followers
June 12, 2024
If you don't know the story let me enlighten you (no spoilers).

A passenger plane full of oil drillers and technical staff crashes in the desert during a sandstorm. They manage to pull themselves together and await rescue but the water is running out and so they can't wait too long ... what do they do?

Absolutely bloody marvellous.

If you don't know Elleston Trevor (or Adam Hall, Trevor Burgess, Caesar Smith, Mansell Black, Simon Rattray, Warwick Scott - all the same man) then go and seek him out. If you enjoy spy thrillers try The Quiller Memorandum. If your thing is WW2 adventures go for Squadron Airborne, or The Big Pickup. You won't be disappointed.
Profile Image for Ron Wroblewski.
665 reviews162 followers
July 25, 2025
I saw the movie version many years ago, but this is the first time I have read the book. How to you build a plane to fly from crashed parts of a plane that crashed in the Sahara Desert. You will have to read the book to find out.
Profile Image for Erik.
360 reviews17 followers
August 5, 2024
I've seen the first movie version (with James Stewart) a couple of times over the years, so when I saw the original novel on the shelves at Value Village, I immediately scooped it up, knowing that it would be a treat to read.

Definitely, a Guy story. Lots of sweat, grunting and mutual hostility. But the essential survival story and its conflict between the characters is quite ingenious and carries you right along to the exciting finale.
Profile Image for  Charlie.
477 reviews217 followers
August 5, 2014
My dearly departed grandfathers favourite book of all time.

It follows a place crashing in the desert and the crews attempts to build their way out. An almost certain early inspiration for Andy Weirs The Martian, phoenix is a scientific and mathematical journey through survival.

We go way beyond water rations here to the point of how much can be produced each night using condensation, how many people that have, who is working, efficiency of working at day vs at night. The same with food and other supplies and all the while knowing at any moment something could happen, like a weather change, that completely changes the equation. Everything hinges on water production.

We also have massive internal fighting within the group. The one man who is seemingly able to think his way out of the situation is an asshole, and whether he is a natural born ass or someone who is behaving a certain way because of how he is perceived, there are moments you feel like strangling him for being so petty and prideful when a number of lives are on the line. His moment of realisation is an incredible point in the book and I wont ruin it for you if you have not read it.

The Dennis Quid movie did a half decent job at capturing the relationships between the characters but never quite reached the right level of desperation. In the book you feel that lives re hanging on a capful of water as they constantly find themselves swinging between working as a team or dying as individuals.

If you liked The Martian I would recommend this in the same way that if you told me you liked the Hunger Games I'd say go read Battle Royale.
Profile Image for Louis.
436 reviews1 follower
August 1, 2009
I was surprised to see this in the new mp3 book collection at my library. I had never read this title, although I have read other books by Trevor. My main criticism of this book is that it was too much like real life. People trapped in the desert for a month with declining resources are bound to re-hash the same arguments or have the same boring things happen to them time after time. But I don't need to read about them more than once, and this happens in this book. I enjoyed the movie, but it also tended to ruin the book for me. I always felt that the rejection of the design because the designer made model planes was ridiculous. I had almost thought that it didn't appear in the book at all but it reared its ugly head near the end. However, the book handled the situation much less dramatically, and more realistically, than the movie did and so I appreciated that fact. I was a little disappointed that more about the fate of the characters after they return to civilization was not pursued. An annoying feature of the book was Stringer's constant temper tantrums and the tension between him and the captain. Plus the technical mumbo jumbo was a bit much, although it began to actually make sense to me by the end of the book.
But in general I felt that the book was an accurate depiction of what it would be like to be stranded in the desert and how people would react to this situation.
34 reviews1 follower
April 13, 2015
Enjoyed the read as the original movie with Jimmy Stewart is a great movie. The movie, with Stewart's incredible performance as Frank Towns, the pilot, is better than the book.
Profile Image for B.E..
Author 20 books60 followers
January 31, 2016
Love the original movie based on this novel - with James Stewart and Richard Attenborough. Love this book, too. Excellent and well worth reading.
Profile Image for Rachel Myers.
48 reviews
February 9, 2019
You really could feel their suffering and the dry conditions. Dark at moments.
Profile Image for Ruth.
776 reviews
June 22, 2025
4.5 stars--very interesting to finally read the book that the 1965 movie came from. The movie is extremely well done and follows the book quite well.
Profile Image for Van Roberts.
210 reviews1 follower
December 14, 2022
An Unforgettable Adventure

A oilfield supply plane crashes in the Sahara desert after it flies into a sandstorm at 30,000 feet. The men who survive must contend with incredible odds as they try to convert the wreckage of the aircraft while struggling to stay alive in the inhospitable desert with its blistering heat, perilous supply of water, murderous Arab tribesmen, and ravenous vultures bent on making a meal of them! The motley crew of survivors must also set aside their differences when one of them decides that they can assemble a plane from the remains of the fuselage. The 50-year old pilot and the young, bespectacled German aircraft designer clash repeatedly because the pilot doesn't think the designer can cobble together a plane that can fly. Better than the brilliant Robert Aldrich masterpiece because you feel like you are stranded alongside these chaps in the desert. They toil during the nights to rebuild the plane, and sleep during the day because they cannot withstand the ravages of a merciless sun. Trevor has penned a masterpiece!
Profile Image for P.S. Winn.
Author 103 books364 followers
July 24, 2017
This is a great story that delves into the psychology of people when faced with a tragic circumstances. The characters in this book get just that when the plane they are in crashes and survival vies with underhanded things happening. This is one to grab for adventure, suspense and psychological thrills
Profile Image for chris.
471 reviews
November 11, 2020
this differs in some cases considerably from the recent movie with Dennis Quaid (2004). some cases better. some cases worse. and differs from the original movie with Jimmy Stewart (1965).
there's some mighty clever dialogue in here.
Profile Image for Chris Conrad.
Author 3 books7 followers
November 13, 2014
Good but one of those rare times when the movie (Jimmy Stewart version) is actually better than the book.
Profile Image for Paul Spence.
1,521 reviews73 followers
September 16, 2021
In Flight of the Phoenix, Elleston Trevor (for that was what he had his name legally changed to) gives us a harrowing tale of survival against the elements and human frailties in the Saharan desert. Fourteen men and a monkey, returning from the Libyan oilfields, live through a plane crash, but are left without food, water, or a radio, and because a sandstorm had blown them off course, no one is looking for them.

The pilot, Frank Towns, is so caught up in justifiably blaming himself that he is nearly ready to give up. But his navigator, Lew Moran, coaxes him towards survival and mediates between the rest of the group and Stringer, a young, arrogant, and hypersensitive engineer who has figured out a way to cobble together a Jerry-rigged smaller plane from the wreckage of the original. Stringer, though unbearably officious, is in all likelihood their only way out, if Moran can keep him from storming off in a fit of pique and keep the others from killing him.

Also among the survivors are Trucker Cobb, a chief driller being sent home from the fields because he's begun to lose his mind and Captain Harris, a gung-ho, by-the-book, British officer and several of his less enthusiastic men. There's also Roberts, who, in a gesture of insane but touching tenderness is giving his water ration to the monkey. Together they form an ill-matched group and as thirst, starvation, exposure, madness, and desperation turn up the torque, social order and morality and simple human decency are shunted aside and the men begin to turn on one another. The only thing that gives them some sense of purpose is the slender possibility that Stringer will somehow manage to salvage a workable plane and that Towns will get it together enough to fly them out.

Mr. Trevor keeps the action moving, but doesn't hesitate to draw out the tension, particularly between Stringer and Towns, the two men who are the equally important keys to survival, but who end up vying for authority over the group. This adds an element of Lord of the Flies to what would be a decent enough action yarn anyway. In this case at least, though the movie is now better remembered, the book holds up well as an exciting piece of fiction in its own right.
Profile Image for Jaime.
1,540 reviews2 followers
September 15, 2022
British author, Elleston Trevor penned an exciting but shorter novel (320 pages) that packs a wallop. I first saw the 1965 movie which is based on this best-selling adventure novel. It is the harrowing tale of a planeload of men from a mining field headed across the Sahara Desert to Benghazi. The converted ancient cargo plane runs into a vicious sandstorm that clogs the plane's engines causing it to crashland in the barren desert. Some die but the surviviors soon realize that their hope for rescue may not come. The tale of the men holding onto hope soon is dashed and they must come up with an alternate plan first proposed by one of the passengers, Springer who proposes they build a 'new' airplane from the plane's wreckage. The characters all have diverse back stories which are brought out as doubt, dehydration, and exhaustion set in. The survivors are a cross-section of society - some noble and some not. The main tension in the novel comes from the young airplane designer, Springer and the veteran pilot, Townes who doubts the 'new' plane can fly. One goes through the paradox of the men surviving on a dwindling supply of water and dates while building a plane with fingers crossed. Although this is not a long novel, one gets enveloped in the tale because the author packs a lot into each page..
Profile Image for Gary Daly.
549 reviews15 followers
April 29, 2024
Goodreads Review, ‘The Flight of the Phoenix’ by Elleston Trevor.

A real magical find (Midway Garden Library). Thoroughly loved the language and story narrative as written in 1965. There has been for me a concerning drift towards ‘changing’ language, style and expression to meet cultural and contemporary diversity standards and this is my issue with eBooks because they can change, delete and remove books freely. Though it seems that the citizenry are ok with this blossoming cultural behaviour. So second hand bookshops which are also disappearing at a rapid rate. Enough! ‘The Flight of the Phoenix’ is a fabulous and well paced adventure story. All the characters are men. They are good old tough guys in that they express themselves like my grandfather (if I knew him, he died before I could meet him). A spot on fun novel. Totally engrossing and packed with fantastic dialogue and situational expectations. Total awesome read. Found at Midway Garden Library, Denistone East, NSW (might hold onto this one as well). Enjoy.
Profile Image for Dan.
288 reviews
December 31, 2024
An amazing story of survival, ingenuity, self-blame, and power struggles (between the pilot and the engineer). I was intrigued with the ability of the engineer to evaluate the possibility of reconstructing the plane before sharing it with the others. Then their ability to use the tools available to bring the plane to life. Building the plane gave them hope and focus, to continue despite their fatigue, hunger, and thirst, rather than giving up and waiting to die.

Written by an Englishman, which explains the lack of expressing any in depth emotions, in spite of all the drama, this was very much a stiff upper lip story. The 1965 movie with Jimmy Steward was much truer to the book’s storyline, than the 2004 one with Dennis Quaid. It is fun to look online at photos of the various phase of the plane’s construction.
Profile Image for John.
860 reviews
July 15, 2019
Although I've seen Jimmy Stewart in The Flight of the Phoenix, I had never read the book. In compliance with the rule of life, the book was much better than the movie--and the movie was excellent. The story explores the difficulties faced by men living on a razor's edge between life and death. Lost in the desert moves from a concept to a reality of the horrible experience of trying to find enough water to live day-to-day. Regardless of the outcome, the men must overcome their fear and lethargy and fight for life. The plot has surprises and twists and turn. Our desire to live is a powerful motivation highlighted in the book. Trevor wrote 50 books and to my knowledge this is the first I've read. I intend to read more!
Profile Image for Aaron Martz.
340 reviews3 followers
May 16, 2023
This book is so steeped in the minutiae of airplane design you could practically use it as a how-to manual if you crashed your own plane in the desert. I love books like this that aren't afraid to be top-heavy with information as well as slam characters head-on into one another and pile on the twists and turns. These characters have everything going against them - the sand, the heat, no food, no water, no time - death is creeping up on them from every side, and they're getting weaker by the minute - and the only thing they have going for them is their knowledge, their experience and their will to live. This seems to have been the book Trevor was born to write, and as a thriller, it's just about perfect.
Profile Image for Dirk Wickenden.
104 reviews1 follower
March 30, 2024
I've seen the original film a few times and the remake and have then on DVD. I've had an ex-library large print (unabridged) version of the book on my shelf for around thirty years (which I originally got for my Dad, who loved the original film) but never got around to reading it til now.

It was not as good as I'd hoped, in fact not that well written, sometimes it was hard to work out who the author was talking about, starting a chapter with 'He' without revealing which character he meant til later. It could have done with a polish before publication. There was also a lot of blasphemy and four letter words, that I didn't expect.

A case where the film (the first version) is better than the book.
Profile Image for David Evans.
800 reviews19 followers
September 6, 2019
Fabulous book which inspired the classic Jimmy Stewart film. You know the story. The description of suffocating heat and blinding sun is as impressive as the ingenuity and fortitude of the survivors and victims of the crash. While watching the film one is always confident that Stewart’s character will do the right thing but he pilot in the book is a much more complex and broken man who has to bear the responsibility of his failed career compounded by the pilot error that led to the disaster and deaths of some passengers.
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