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Search tags: charles-a-lindbergh
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review 2018-03-21 01:32
WHAT "WE" ACCOMPLISHED
We by Charles A. Lindbergh - Charles A Lindbergh,Sam Sloan,Fitzhugh Green Sr.,Myron T. Herrick
I wonder how many people knew that Charles Lindbergh had written a book in 1927 shortly after he accomplished the remarkable feat of flying solo from New York to Paris? Until about a couple of weeks ago, I had no idea that "WE" existed. "WE" in the title was Lindbergh's way of referring to himself and the airplane ('The Spirit of St. Louis') that carried him across the ocean to Paris. He considered what he achieved in that flight not a singular accomplishment for him alone, but also for the plane. 

Most of the book is taken up with Lindbergh telling his life story, his brief time as a student of Engineering at the University of Wisconsin, his initial training as a pilot in a flight school in Nebraska in 1922, his experiences barnstorming in the South and Midwest, his subsequent acceptance into the U.S. Army Air Service as an aviation cadet in 1924, his successful completion of his military training the following year (Lindbergh was made a reserve officer), followed by his service as an air mail pilot --- all of which led up to his undertaking the quest to carry out a transatlantic flight. A quest (as represented by the award of the $25,000 Orteig Prize for any aviator who succeeded in flying across the Atlantic) that had already been taken up by many of the world's renowned aviators --- without success. Many died in the attempt. 

The remainder of the book goes on to describe the reception Lindbergh received across Europe and the U.S. in May and June of 1927 after his record flight. 

I enjoyed reading this book so much. While there are aspects of Charles Lindbergh --- later manifested in his life when he became a controversial political voice with the America First isolationist movement pre-Pearl Harbor --- that I do not like, his achievements in aviation are AMAZING.
 
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review 2017-08-27 01:56
90 YEARS LATER - A CELEBRATION OF LINDBERGH'S EPIC TRANSATLANTIC FLIGHT
The Flight: Charles Lindbergh's Daring and Immortal 1927 Transatlantic Crossing - Dan Hampton

As someone who has been an aviation fan since I was 10, "THE FLIGHT: Charles Lindbergh's Daring and Immortal 1927 Transatlantic Crossing" was a book that commanded my immediate attention. So I bought it and read it avidly. The strengths of the book are in the way, Hampton, himself a retired U.S. Air Force combat pilot, conveys vividly to the reader, the joys and thrills of flight as well as the challenges Lindbergh faced in making his solo flight across the Atlantic from New York to Paris in May 1927. Several aviators since 1919 (when the Orteig Prize was initially offered for any aviator(s) who were able to successfully fly non-stop across the Atlantic from New York to Paris or Paris to New York) had tried to fly the Atlantic non-stop, and failed. Many of them dying horrible deaths. And in the case of the celebrated First World War French aviators Charles Nungesser and François Coli, disappeared in an attempt to fly from Paris to New York several weeks before Lindbergh's flight from Roosevelt Field. 

Reading this book deepened my appreciation of Lindbergh's singular accomplishment. Imagine yourself flying alone in a small, upper-winged monoplane across 3,000 miles of ocean to Europe, not always sure of your position in the sky (even with the benefit of charts, compass, and other navigational aides) for roughly 33.5 hours straight without having slept for close to 3 days? Many people in the early to mid-1920s looked upon aviation as little more than a sport or a fool's hobby. What Lindbergh and his plane, The Spirit of St. Louis, managed to do showed aviation's potential and made possible the further development of commercial aviation and technology for space travel and exploration over the next 40 years. 

Hampton also shares with the reader how much Lindbergh's life was changed as a result of the flight - good and not-so-good, for Fame often exacts a high cost from anyone who becomes a public celebrity - which was sobering to me. "THE FLIGHT" is a book I would highly recommend to ANYONE who love stories of how seemingly ordinary, humble people can --- in spite of heavy odds --- accomplish great things and so inspire the world.

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review 2014-01-14 01:14
One Summer: America, 1927 - Bill Bryson

Bill Bryson makes you feel like you are sitting next to someone telling you some stories about the summer of 1927 instead of listening to some dry, boring historian.  And some fairly momentous events happened that summer.  Most of the events I knew a little about but much less than I thought such as Charles Lindbergh's historic flight from New York to Paris in the Spirit of St Louis.  And about Prohibition in Chicago and Al Capone.  Some events I had never heard about like the massive flooding all over the Midwest.  This overview of 1927 includes plenty of background on the events and the individuals involved, so you don't need to know much beforehand.  If you enjoy baseball, you'll like reading about the amazing season the New York Yankees had and Babe Ruth in particular.  I seriously dislike the Yankees but since this was 87 years ago, even I can feel good about their accomplishments.  One Summer was just as enjoyable as all of the other books by Bill Bryson I've ever read.

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review 2011-09-01 00:00
The American Axis: Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh, and the Rise of the Third Reich
The American Axis: Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh, and the Rise of the Third Reich - Max Wallace I'm counting this read even though I didn't quite finish. Good book, not a whole lot new and the author seemed to jump to some conclusions that his evidence didn't back up, but easy to read and enjoyable over all.
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