Fight for the Sky

Fight for the Sky
Author: Douglas Bader
Publisher: Pen and Sword
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2006-05-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1473814065

The only book written by the legendary “legless” ace, the double amputee World War II fighter pilot immortalized by the film Reach for the Sky. In Fight for the Sky, Douglas Bader tells the inspiring story of the Battle of Britain from the viewpoint of “The Few.” Using superb illustrations he traces the development of the Spitfire and Hurricane and describes the nail-biting actions of those who flew them against far superior numbers of enemy aircraft. As an added bonus, other well-known fighter aces including Johnnie Johnson, “Laddie” Lucas and Max Aikten contribute to Douglas’s book, no doubt out of affection and respect. This a really important contribution to RAF history by one of the greatest—and certainly the most famous—pilot of the Second World War.

Hurricanes Over Tobruk

Hurricanes Over Tobruk
Author: Brian Cull
Publisher: Grub Street the Basement
Total Pages: 224
Release: 1999
Genre: Hurricane (Fighter plane)
ISBN: 9781902304113

At the beginning of 1941, the strategically vital port of Tobruk and its Allied garrison was under siege from Rommel's troops and the Luftwaffe and Italian Regia Aeronautica. The only air defence standing in the way was a handful of RAF Hurricane pilots, supported by their RAAF and SAAF colleagues.

The Curtiss Kittyhawk Mk. II

The Curtiss Kittyhawk Mk. II
Author: Phil H. Listemann
Publisher: Squadrons!
Total Pages: 40
Release: 2017-01-31
Genre: History
ISBN:

The Curtiss P-40 was the most numerous USAAF fighter on hand when the United States entered the war in December 1941. A development of the Curtiss P-36, the P-40 was essentially a P-36 equipped with an Allison inline V12 V-1710. The French were the first to express an interest in this model, known as the H-81, having already ordered the Curtiss H-75, the export version of the P-36. The Curtiss H-81 would later be purchased by the USAAC and the RAF as the Tomahawk. Curtiss continued to improve the breed and a new production model, the H-87, was soon available with a new version of the V-1710 that had a spur-gear reduction mechanism, raising the engine thrust-line. This caused the nose profile to be redesigned, hence the new Curtiss designation. The RAF became interested in purchasing this version as the Kittyhawk for its squadrons fighting in the Western Desert and to replace the Tomahawk already in service. In all four Marks would be used by the RAF, the Mk II corresponding to the P-40F/L and would see service in only two squadrons, the Australian 3 Squadron and the British 260 Squadron and saw action for the first time shortly before the Battle of El Alamein. The full story of the Kittyhawk Mk II is here told in 38 pages illustrated with 40 photos and 5 colour profiles.

Wire and Walls

Wire and Walls
Author: Charles Rollings
Publisher:
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2002
Genre: Escapes
ISBN: 9780711028975

This book, the product of 10 years research, traces the history of four of the notorious POW camps used to intern captured allied aircrew in Germany: Spangenburg, Thorn, Lubeck and Warburg. For most of World War II these prisoners lived in conditions that directly contravened the Geneva Convention. They received no Red Cross food for months at a time, subsisting only on meagre German rations, and were neglected by MI9, the department of the War Office set up to foster escape and evasion. Wire and Walls is the previously untold full story of these forgotten prisoners; who they were, how they were captured, and how they survived. Based on correspondence and interviews with hundreds of survivors, as well as unpublished diaries and manuscripts along with records from the Imperial War Museum, the Public Record office and the Bundesarchiv, the book also includes many illustrations and shot down stories which appear for the first time in this book.

Curtiss P-40

Curtiss P-40
Author: Carl Molesworth
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 102
Release: 2013-11-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 1472807065

The second in a pair of books on the Curtiss P-40, a definitive technical guide to the snub-nosed Warhawk variants. An improved version of the Allison V-1710 engine gave rise to the Curtiss H-87, which began life in 1941 as the P-40D and featured a completely redesigned fuselage. The shorter and deeper nose of the new fighter gave it a decidedly snub-nosed appearance compared to the earlier P-40 models. Curtiss continued to tweak the H-87 for the next two years in the search for better performance, but the last major version, the P-40N, was only marginally faster than the first. In the process, Curtiss even tried an engine change to the Packard Merlin in the P-40F and L but to no avail. What the late model P-40s lacked in speed and service ceiling, they traded for maneuverability, durability and availability. Their niche became fighter-bomber operations, and they fought on fronts as varied as the arctic wastes of the Aleutian Islands and Iceland, the steaming jungles of the South Pacific and the barren deserts of North Africa. P-40s were a common sight in the skies over Burma and China, Sicily and Italy, and western Russia as well. This compact, illustration volume covers the whole history of these variants until production ceased in 1944, by which time Curtiss had produced nearly 14,000 P-40s.

Canadair Sabre Mk.1-6, Commonwealth Sabre Mk.30-32

Canadair Sabre Mk.1-6, Commonwealth Sabre Mk.30-32
Author: Richard Ward
Publisher: Reading, Eng. : Osprey Publications [1971]
Total Pages: 48
Release: 1971-01-01
Genre: Canadair Limited
ISBN: 9780668023054

Beskriver det oprindeligt amerikansk byggede jagerfly Sabre i dets forskellige versioner og de lande, der benyttede det og senere byggede flyet på licens.