Book description
An unforgettable and thrilling tale of two WWII bomber pilots who
forged an unexpected friendship in the flak-filled skies over Germany.
The air battle over Nazi Germany in WWII was hell above earth. For the
British it lasted six years, for the Americans three, and the final
death toll was 125,000 Allied aircrew, including 56,000 from the RAF
and 26,000 Americans from the British-based Eighth Air Force. For
bomber crews, every day they flew was like D-Day, exacting tremendous
emotion and trauma. Death could come in many guises: an unlucky flak
burst, Luftwaffe fighters that could appear anywhere at any time, or
pilot error while flying less than twenty feet apart. Twenty-year-old
US Captain Werner Goering accepted this, and even thrived on the
adrenalin rush Â- he was an exceptional pilot. But Werner was also
known to be the nephew of Herman Göring, Commander-in-Chief of the
Luftwaffe Â- and because of it he became a marked man. When Werner
Goering qualified to become a bomber commander in 1942, the FBI and
the American military could not prevent him from serving his American
homeland in war, but neither were they prepared to risk the propaganda
coup that his capture, or even his desertion, would represent for Nazi
Germany. So, in early 1943, J. Edgar Hoover instructed his FBI agents
to find a man capable of flying with Werner who was also willing to
shoot him dead in the cockpit should their plane be downed in
Nazi-occupied Europe. They found Jack Rencher, a tough, insular, B-17
instructor from Yuma, Arizona, who also happened to be one of the
Army's best pistol shots. That Jack and Werner became unlikely friends
is just one more twist in Hell Above Earth, one of the most incredible
untold tales to come out of WWII.
Stephen Frater, a former staff writer for the Herald-Tribune Media
Group, a New York Times company, is a graduate of Brown University and
lives in Rhode Island and Florida.