good books?
#4
I second this. I am not a huge fan of aviation reads but an old captain handed me this dirty dingy book one day and said "Kid, you're a damn good stick. Read this book and keep it."
I suggest this to anyone who is an airline pilot. One of the few GREAT books on early airline aviation and what it was like.
#5
Langewiesche is the author of numerous books, try: Inside the Sky: A Meditation on Flight (Pantheon, 1998)
Second the Earnest Gann(two ns) Fate is The Hunter, he wrote many books and has a very good and easy to read style, you may also like:The Bad Angel, Arbor House, 1987 and The Black Watch: The Men Who Fly America's Secret Spy Planes, Random House, 1989.
Chickenhawk-Mason
Fly For Your Life- Robert Tuck
Second the Earnest Gann(two ns) Fate is The Hunter, he wrote many books and has a very good and easy to read style, you may also like:The Bad Angel, Arbor House, 1987 and The Black Watch: The Men Who Fly America's Secret Spy Planes, Random House, 1989.
Chickenhawk-Mason
Fly For Your Life- Robert Tuck
Last edited by jungle; 12-14-2008 at 11:28 PM.
#7
"I Could Never Be So Lucky Again" by Gen. James H. Doolittle
"Mavericks of the Sky" by Barry Rosenberg & Catherine Macaulay
"To Conquer The Air" by James Tobin
"SR-71 Revealed" by Richard H. Graham, Col. USAF (Ret)
"The Triumph of Instrument Flight" by Franklyn E. Dailey, Jr.
"North Star Over My Shoulder" by Bob Buck
"Unheeded Warning" by Stephen A. Fredrick
"Skunk Works" by Ben R. Rich
"Forever Flying" by Bob Hoover
"Stranger to the Ground" Richard Bach
"Flying Blind, Flying Safe" by Mary Schiavo
"Mavericks of the Sky" by Barry Rosenberg & Catherine Macaulay
"To Conquer The Air" by James Tobin
"SR-71 Revealed" by Richard H. Graham, Col. USAF (Ret)
"The Triumph of Instrument Flight" by Franklyn E. Dailey, Jr.
"North Star Over My Shoulder" by Bob Buck
"Unheeded Warning" by Stephen A. Fredrick
"Skunk Works" by Ben R. Rich
"Forever Flying" by Bob Hoover
"Stranger to the Ground" Richard Bach
"Flying Blind, Flying Safe" by Mary Schiavo
#9
Langewiesche is the author of numerous books, try: Inside the Sky: A Meditation on Flight (Pantheon, 1998)
Second the Earnest Gann(two ns) Fate is The Hunter, he wrote many books and has a very good and easy to read style, you may also like:The Bad Angel, Arbor House, 1987 and The Black Watch: The Men Who Fly America's Secret Spy Planes, Random House, 1989.
Chickenhawk-Mason
Fly For Your Life- Robert Tuck
Second the Earnest Gann(two ns) Fate is The Hunter, he wrote many books and has a very good and easy to read style, you may also like:The Bad Angel, Arbor House, 1987 and The Black Watch: The Men Who Fly America's Secret Spy Planes, Random House, 1989.
Chickenhawk-Mason
Fly For Your Life- Robert Tuck
Gann is exceptional as well. I would also recommend a book by Bob Serling (brother of the Twilight Zone guy) - he wrote a book about the Lockheed Electra (L-188, not the older versions) and how they diagnosed and fixed the structural problems on the airplane (whirlmode). It was an awesome book.
#10
Northern Flights by Gerry Bruder. Floatplanes outta Ketchikan. Best written account of flying in SE Alaska murk, and the good days too, that I've ever read.
Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat, not strictly about aviation, but excellent capture of a time and place in Canada's far reaches. Beautiful, overlooked movie version also.
Nice question, thanks for asking it.
Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat, not strictly about aviation, but excellent capture of a time and place in Canada's far reaches. Beautiful, overlooked movie version also.
Nice question, thanks for asking it.
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