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These memoirs of a combat pilot in England's Royal Flying Corps during WW I are a great classic of military aviation, a chronicle of a lost age of heroes and the birth of a new age of flight.
"This prince of pilots has had a charmed life in every sense of the word. He is a thinker, a master of words and a bit of a poet" --George Bernard Shaw
332 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1936
Nothing could live under that rain of splintering steel. A whole nation was behind it. The earth had been harnessed, the coal and ore mined, the flaming metal run; the workshops had shaped it with care and precision; our womenkind had made fuses, prepared deadly explosives; our engineers had designed machines to fire the product with a maximum of effect; and finally, here, all these vast credits of labour and capital were being blown to smithereens. It was the most effective way of destroying wealth that man had yet devised; but as a means of extermination (roughly one man for every hundred shells), it was primitive and inefficient.Some of the book is a bit technical - I had to double check with my husband the difference between the ailerons and the elevator, for instance, and googling for images of some of the planes was essential (what does a Morane Parasol look like?). There is also some beautiful prose, though I could have wished for more. My one complaint is that for the most part Lewis seemed too distant from his experiences, except when he was sharing his feelings of being alone in a plane.