The Flying Life

The Flying Life
Author: Lauran Paine Jr
Publisher:
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2009-11
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 9780965760706

The collected stories of EAA "Sport Aviation" columnist Lauran Paine Jr. This is aviation from the heart.

A Flying Life

A Flying Life
Author: David Crotty
Publisher: Museum Victoria
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2010
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0980619033

The flying career of John Robertson Duigan spanned just a decade from 1908 to 1918. 100 years ago he built and successfully flew the first aeroplane made in Australia using only photographs, journal articles and an unreliable textbook as his guides. He was the first Australian to fly a powered Australian-made aeroplane in Australia. The full story of John Duigan and his flying career has now been published for the first time. An article about the flying career of John Duigan is featured here in The Age

Skyfaring

Skyfaring
Author: Mark Vanhoenacker
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2015-06-02
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 0385351828

A poetic and nuanced exploration of the human experience of flight that reminds us of the full imaginative weight of our most ordinary journeys—and reawakens our capacity to be amazed. The twenty-first century has relegated airplane flight—a once remarkable feat of human ingenuity—to the realm of the mundane. Mark Vanhoenacker, a 747 pilot who left academia and a career in the business world to pursue his childhood dream of flight, asks us to reimagine what we—both as pilots and as passengers—are actually doing when we enter the world between departure and discovery. In a seamless fusion of history, politics, geography, meteorology, ecology, family, and physics, Vanhoenacker vaults across geographical and cultural boundaries; above mountains, oceans, and deserts; through snow, wind, and rain, renewing a simultaneously humbling and almost superhuman activity that affords us unparalleled perspectives on the planet we inhabit and the communities we form.

Flying Is My Life [Illustrated Edition]

Flying Is My Life [Illustrated Edition]
Author: Hanna Reitsch
Publisher: Pickle Partners Publishing
Total Pages: 676
Release: 2016-07-26
Genre: History
ISBN: 1786259214

Includes the Aerial Warfare In Europe During World War II illustrations pack with over 200 maps, plans, and photos. Hanna Reitsch is unusual in being a feminine woman who was yet the equal of men in a dangerous male profession — test-piloting new military aircraft. Her love of flying from childhood on, along with her superior intelligence, determination, and ability to withstand tremendous stresses, gave her the edge that allowed her to rise to the top of the aviation world. Hanna Reitsch offered her gifts to the German nation in the same way that Adolf Hitler and many others did — with a complete giving of herself and her abilities, holding nothing back. Although she lived to 1979, she never renounced her participation with the National Socialist government or criticized Hitler, even under pressure to do so. Hanna’s life story is an amazing one that sounds almost unbelievable in its drama and acts of heroism. She never married or had children; instead she occupied herself with the two burning loves of her life — flying and the salvation of her beloved Fatherland in its time of need.

A Fly Fisher's Life

A Fly Fisher's Life
Author: Charles Ritz
Publisher: Robert Hale
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996-07-31
Genre: Fly fishing
ISBN: 9780709058526

In this work, Charles Ritz reflects on rods, lines and other tackle as well as his famous method of fly-casting - High Speed, High Line - which is described in detail. The book is enriched with his reminiscences from the finest game-fishing waters of Europe and North America.

A Flying Life: An Enthusiast's Photographic Record of British Aviation in the 1930s

A Flying Life: An Enthusiast's Photographic Record of British Aviation in the 1930s
Author: Richard Riding
Publisher: Fonthill Media
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2014-03-27
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 1781554145

A Flying Life: An Enthusiast's Photographic Record of British Aviation in the 1930s consists of photographs that were taken by E. J. Riding, the author's father, who spent his working life in the aviation industry. He was apprenticed to A. V. Roe & Company and employed as an aircraft engineer up to the war. During the war, Riding became an AID inspector and was seconded to Fairey Aviation, London Aircraft Production and the de Havilland Aircraft Company, latterly signing out Halifax bombers and Mosquitoes as airworthy and ready for test flying. Sadly, Riding was killed in a flying accident in 1950. During his short life, he gained a lasting reputation as an engineer, professional photographer, draughtsman and aero modeller. Riding began taking photographs of aircraft in 1931, aged fifteen. Fortunately, he kept copious notes recording the locations and dates of when and where aircraft were photographed. More importantly, he noted aircraft colour schemes, details rarely recorded by the press at the time. The aircraft types photographed by Riding ranged from the Tiger Moth, RAF fighters, ultra-lights to airliners, the whole giving a good cross-section of flying in Britain up to the outbreak of the Second World War. The book's photographs are of excellent quality and do not all consist of sterile bog-standard side views. Many depict aircraft being stripped for maintenance and servicing, others show aircraft dumped or after having crashed. Although approached in a generally light-hearted manner, the book features in-depth and informative captions.

The Flying Life

The Flying Life
Author: Stefan A. Cavallo
Publisher: Christian Faith Publishing, Inc.
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2024-05-31
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

The Flying Life is the life story of our father, Stefan Cavallo, a test pilot at Langley Field during World War II, who passed away peacefully on September 25, 2022, at 101. While attending the School of Aeronautical Engineering at New York University, he also took flying lessons at Teterboro Airfield in New Jersey through a government-sponsored program and graduated with a combination aeronautical engineering degree and pilot’s license in April 1942, just five months after Pearl Harbor. He was immediately picked up by NACA (a precursor of NASA) and became one of their civilian test pilots—one of only five men. He had a remarkable seventy-five-year career in aviation. As a NACA test pilot for six years, three of them during the war, he flew and tested every version of the P51 Mustang (the A, B, D, and H prototypes) as well as dozens of other aircraft—from rocket-powered planes to amphibians and helicopters. Late in the war, when P51s were escorting B47 bombers over Germany, we discovered that we were mysteriously losing too many of the fighter planes in thunderstorms over Europe: the P51s went down while the B47s came safely home. The NACA pilots were given the assignment of determining the cause of these failures: most of the pilots and engineers were convinced that the plane’s wings had sustained heavy damage and had even fallen off—but the planes went down over enemy territory so there was no way to know for sure. A test was designed to see if NACA could solve the mystery. Stefan Cavallo, my father, was assigned to fly a P51 deliberately into a thunderstorm—with the task of finding out what was causing the crash. And find out he did—losing his burning plane in the process and bailing out over rural Virginia. Surprisingly, it wasn’t the wings that were the problem; it was the engine, which caught fire almost immediately in the windstorm. After he left NACA, Stefan Cavallo continued test-flying for about five years with EDO, a seaplane manufacturing company, and then retired from commercial aviation. In June 2010, while flying his Cessna 210, his engine seized five miles off the Long Island coastline. He was able—at the age of eighty-nine—to make a dead-stick landing in between a heavily populated beach and a full parking lot, in a very small patch of sand. There were no injuries—to him or anyone else. He made that night’s six o’clock news. Our father loved to fly. His book is a love letter to aeronautics—and a great read!

Maya Angelou's Life In a Fly

Maya Angelou's Life In a Fly
Author: Edgar Wollstone
Publisher: AJS
Total Pages: 47
Release:
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Maya Angelou aka Marguerite Johnson was a civil activist, award winning author and a legendary poet. Her fame still shines on her memoir, I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings. Angelou is considered to the voice of black community. Her words echoed the sufferings and roared for their suppressed silence. She was honored with numerous awards is still praised for her touching works and a voice which overcame her struggles life had thrown at her. Her works are the portrayal of her own personal experiences. She gave life to her works by her raw approach of writing. There was a longing for freedom and a penetrating voice for her own race. Her life was a series of overwhelming incidents that even suppressed her voice for a long period. The iconic lady who became a mother during her teenage has bestowed some life changing works the English Literature has witnessed. This book throws light on the inspiring life journey of this prolific writer and iconic personality…

Dalai Lama - Life & Legacy, In a Fly

Dalai Lama - Life & Legacy, In a Fly
Author: Carlee Orman
Publisher: AJS
Total Pages: 53
Release:
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

A peace loving country, home to rich cultural identity has been sieged, its ruler banished, its existence threatened. Sixty years since His Highness, the 14th Dalai Lama has left his motherland in fear of loss of life at the hands of Chinese interlopers. A country that has its spiritual leader at its helm, who is embodiment of eternal peace and compassion, has been stripped of its right to exist as one. The Dalai Lama who is revered all around the world and a Nobel laureate for peace has been forced to live in India for the past 60 years by a cantankerous neighbor. Tibet once had its own government, passport, currency, stamps and flag is now denied its ancient history and lineage and is hectored to be either part of China or live in exile forever. When world nations are waging information and technology wars to emerge as a superpower, there is a group of people who are living on a foreign soil for the past 60 years, hoping and praying that their motherland be given back to them. When the world powers are involved in diplomatic and strategic trade wars to hector and hegemonize each other, the Tibetans live each day clinging to a desperate hope that one day they can go back to the land they call their home. A book that tells the story of a people that had to flee its motherland to live in a foreign land, it rips one’s heart to read about their plight unable to go back to their place of birth. The story of the people of Tibet is a tragic one but it is also one of eternal compassion and resilience even when in the teeth of abject aggression. It also tells the story of India’s nonpareil tolerance to another culture, religion and tradition and its generosity and kindness towards a populace who don’t even belong to its country. India not only gave the Dalai Lama a safe home but also all rights to continue to preserve their unique identity which was denied in their own soil due to Chinese aggression. Why does an Asian Communist giant like China need a theocracy like Tibet? Will China ever free Tibetans and their land? Will Dalai Lama end three centuries-old Tibetan culture? Will the Tibetans ever be able to go home? Will the roof of the world accept defeat or achieve its freedom in this enduring non-violent strive? Read this book to know all about the 14th Dalai Lama and the people of Tibet!