The P-38 Lightning and the Men Who Flew It


Price:
Sale price$76.99


By Wolfgang W. E. Samuel, Alfred Stettner
Imprint: UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
277

Description

Wolfgang W. E. Samuel, Colonel, US Air Force (Ret.), was born in Germany in 1935 and immigrated to the United States in 1951 at age sixteen with an eighth-grade education and no English-language skills. Upon graduation from the University of Colorado, he was commissioned 2nd Lieutenant in the US Air Force and then flew over one hundred strategic reconnaissance missions against the Soviet Union during the Cold War. His first book German Boy: A Refugee's Story garnered favorable reviews from the New York Times and numerous other outlets. He is author of eight books published by University Press of Mississippi.

Wolfgang Samuel's latest book is a wonderful read. By allowing the men who flew the P-38 Lightning to tell their tales in their own words, Samuel brings their incredible experiences to life. It ought to be on the bookshelf of everyone interested in the human aspect of aviation and the air war of World War II.--Alfred Stettner, docent, National Air and Space Museum Each interview, rich in detail, brings to life the sacrifices of war. Even statistics regarding the number of training deaths are startling, yet those losses, too, speak to the costs of preparing for battle. The account of Lieutenant Walter Langdon seems particularly striking--he played a relaxed game of Pinochle in the morning but died in a 'crash and burn' exchange with the enemy that afternoon. The gift of The P-38 Lightning and the Men Who Flew It is in bringing into bold focus the personal stories of these young pilots who trained to fly these planes during extraordinarily perilous times.--Rachel Yarnell Thompson, author of Marshall: A Statesman Shaped in the Crucible of War In 1943, Lockheed's P-38 Lightning helped the US Army Air Forces seize control of the air in the Southwest Pacific, and more than a hundred Lightning pilots became aces in the theater. In Europe, the Lightning struggled against technical faults and the Luftwaffe but offered long range, accurate gunnery, and twin-engine survivability. Strap into the P-38's cockpit with Wolf Samuel's deeply researched account, and you'll gain admiration and appreciation for those American heroes who mastered this innovative fighter.--Tom Jones, USAF pilot, veteran astronaut, and author of Space Shuttle Stories: Firsthand Astronaut Accounts from All 135 Missions Lockheed's twin-engine P-38 Lightning fighter numbered among the first military planes in World War II to feature tricycle landing gear, which allowed its pilot to see where he was going while taxiing on a runway, unlike tail draggers whose pilots had to taxi side-to-side. Moreover, with the cockpit mounted between the engines, the P-38's weapons were found only in the cockpit's nose, which meant they fired straight ahead, unlike single-engine taildraggers whose weapons appeared on each wing and had to be aimed so that the ammunition came together against an enemy at a specified distance. Wolf Samuel's The P-38 Lightning and the Men Who Flew It covers the P-38 throughout its military existence, along with significant accounts of the aircraft in action by the fighter pilots who flew it. If you wish to know and understand this aerial novelty, you will want to read this book.--R. Cargill Hall, emeritus chief historian, National Reconnaissance Office, Department of Defense

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