Book description
The Royal Air Force is synonymous with its heroic achievements in
the summer of 1940, when Winston Churchill's 'famous few' - the
Hurricane and Spitfire pilots of RAF Fighter Command - held Goering's
Luftwaffe at bay in the Battle of Britain, thereby changing the course
of the war. For much of the twentieth century, warplanes were fixed in
the world's imagination, a symbol of the perils and excitements of the
modern era. But within the space of a hundred years, military aviation
has morphed from the exotic to the mundane. An activity which was
charged with danger - the domain of the daring - is now carried out by
computers and pilotless drones. Aviators have always seemed different
to soldiers and sailors - more adventurous, questing and imaginative.
Their stories gripped the public and in both wars and air aces
dominated each side's propaganda, capturing hearts and dreams. Writing
with the verve, passion and the sheer narrative aplomb familiar to
many thousands of readers from his bestselling Second World War aerial
histories, Fighter Boys and Bomber Boys, Patrick Bishop's Wings is a
rich and compelling account of military flying from its heroic early
days to the present.
Patrick Bishop has been a foreign correspondent since 1982,
covering numerous conflicts around the world and has reported from the
front line of almost every major war of our era. In the last six years
he has emerged as a military historian of the first order with his
top-ten bestsellers Fighter Boys and Bomber Boys, which cast new light
on the men who fought in the Battle of Britain and the Strategic Air
Campaign against Germany. He is also the author of the much-praised
Battle of Britain and 3 Para.