Combat Aviation discussion
What are you currently reading?


http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...



I've bought quite a few combat aviation books recently so hopefully I'll have a chance to get to read them soon.

http://topgunbio.squarespace.com/harp...
Lovely stories! #recommend

Oh, great choice!
For my part, I am pecking away at Christopher Shores's great tome about the Mediterranean air war, and having fun comparing his more realistic accounts with those of Colin Heaton in "The Star of Africa" about Hans Marseille. I am always puzzled by the adoration of British writers for Luftwaffe pilots, who after all were in the business of killing Englishmen in the service of the worst regime ever seen. Does Marseille get a pass because he didn't believe in the Third Reich but was more or less killing people for the fun of it?
- Dan Ford


I have that book at home on my shelf, but have yet to read it unfortunately. I'd be interested in knowing what you think of it when you finish.

Robert Coram's book 'Boyd. The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War' (2002). My review: http://jeand99.blogspot.nl/2013/11/to...

Oh, great choice!
For my part, I am pecking away at Christopher Shores's great tome about..."
If you have not read my book, The Star of Africa: The Story of hans Marseille, I suggest you do so. Soldiers (even pilots0 fight because their governments send them to do so. It is how they personally prosecute the war that matters. Marseille went above and beyond the excepted code of chivalry, which was widely accepted and conducted by the Luftwaffe officers and men. Remember the the British were fighting to maintain an Empire that enslaved millions in India, Africa, and always conscripted their subjects for wartime service. As a former warrior myself, we may not agree with our political leadership, but we fight for each other, not a politician.


"A Vision So Noble: John Boyd, the OODA Loop, and America's War on Terror" is a study of how Boyd's counter-guerrilla theories (he wrote at length about insurgency, inspired by his AAF service in Thailand during the Vietnam War) might have been applied to the Afghan war.



Boyd was a true pioneer in modern aerial combat. In my novel Hamfist Out, Hamfist uses his knowledge of the OODA Loop in a dogfight with a MiG.

I'll have to look into that, thank you. I do plan on reading Science, Strategy and War: The Strategic Theory of John Boyd when I can find the time

Yes, he was. That's pretty cool



This book, in terms of research and attention to detail, offers the reader a comprehensive history of the uphill struggle that took place within the U.S. Army and Congress between the wars to establish an Army Air Corps as an essential and indispensible element in national defense. (This was a struggle not unlike what advocates of the aircraft carrier faced during the same era against the established "battleship minded" senior naval officer ruling class in the U.S. Navy.)




Spitfire Aces of Northwest Europe 1944-45 by Andrew Thomas




Book on the fastest flying aircraft in the world."
How are you liking it?

1) French Strategic and Tactical Bombardment Forces of World War I by Rene Martel

Not many people (I suspect) know of the contributions the French made, as pioneers, in the area of strategic and tactical bombing with their air force in World War I.
2) The First Eagles: The American Pilots Who Flew With the British, Became Aces, and Won World War I by Gavin Mortimer

3) Dogfight: The Greatest Air Duels of World War II ed. by Tony Holmes


1. Rudel/ Stuka Pilot
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6...
2. Mike Hammond/ The Mind of War
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5...
3. Mike Shaw/ From the cockpit Harrier GR3. Not on Goodreads booklist yet.
My bookreviews on these 3 books:
http://jeand99.blogspot.nl/2014/01/an...
and more from me on Rudel:
http://jeand99.blogspot.nl/2012/11/de...

Though I am still reading it but it's quite promising.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/photo/...

Rolf Stünkel/ Mach 2: Meine Jahre im Cockpit des Starfighters
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...

Book on the fastest flying aircraft in the world."
How are you liking it?"
@Chrissy it's fantastic read, quite a detailed account of the aircraft covering a range of topics from crews, aircraft, missions.
Though I am still reading it but it's quite interesting.


I've bought quite a few combat aviation books recently ..."
That's a fantastic book!
Dustin wrote: "Wrote reviews for 'Scream of Eagles' and 'Flying Tigers'. The former much better than the latter, but both worthy of reading. I'm on to 'Wings of Fury' now, another one written by Robert Wilcox. He..."
Scream of Eagles was great, especially all the tales of their scrounging for equipment, and borrowing aircraft from VF-124. I found it interesting how they were forced to train ACM on the sly with their missle-centric platforms pre-Vietnam War.

The first two are great books. The third I still need to get around to reading. As always the TBR piles up faster than I can read :)

A very readable, revealing book. At one of the competitions in January 1918, a prototype fighter was flown, which later in the Spring and Summer 1918 would become one of the top fighter planes of the First World War, the Fokker DVII.


"A Higher Call" by Adam Makos
and
"The Dog Who Could Fly" by Damien Lewis
Both were very good.




Also, I'm currently reading
"The Wright Brothers" by David McCullough

Originally published in 1977, I Chose the Sky had been out of print til it was republished this year. It's a fantastic, highly readable book with lots of photos.

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America's Secret MIG squadron (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Robert Dixon (other topics)David E. Leue (other topics)
Leonard H. Rochford (other topics)
Kenneth Lane Glemby (other topics)
Jack Herris (other topics)
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I'm not reading anything on combat aviation right now, but this year I've read Pleiku, Apache, In the Company of Heroes, and Black Hawk Down. I highly recommend all of them to anyone interested in helicopter warfare