The Wild Blue: The Men and Boys Who Flew the B-24s Over Germany 1944-45
The eagerly anticipated follow-up to last years New York Times no.1 bestseller NOTHING LIKE IT IN THE WORLD. Author Stephen Ambrose brings us the unforgettable story of the young men who flew the B-24's over wartime Germany. In THE WILD BLUE, Ambrose describes how the Air Force recruited, trained...
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The eagerly anticipated follow-up to last years New York Times no.1 bestseller NOTHING LIKE IT IN THE WORLD. Author Stephen Ambrose brings us the unforgettable story of the young men who flew the B-24's over wartime Germany. In THE WILD BLUE, Ambrose describes how the Air Force recruited, trained and then chose the few who would undertake the most demanding and dangerous jobs in the war. These are the boys turned pilots, bombardiers, navigators and gunners of the B24's, who suffered 50 percent casualities. With his extraordinary talent for bringing alive the action and tension of combat, Ambrose takes us along in the B24's as their crews fought to the death to reach their targets and destroy the German war machine. Twenty two year old George McGovern flew thirty five missions and won the Distinguished Flying Cross. THE WILD BLUE will be published, in America, simultaneously with the Dreamworks/HBO ten-part series, BAND OF BROTHERS, based on Ambrose's bestselling account of Easy Company on its journey from training camps in England to Hitler's headquarters.
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9780743203395 (0743203399)
ASIN: 0743203399
Publish date: 2001-08-14
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Pages no: 304
Edition language: English
Category:
Non Fiction,
Biography,
History,
Literature,
American,
War,
Military,
American History,
World War II,
Military History,
Historical
HUGE, huge disappointment. I expected a book about the Liberator and it's missions, not a life of George McGovern. Who cares about him? First time I didn't finish a book and I blame it on poor research. I should have read people's reviews. Stephen Ambrose's worst book.
A creation of a crack marketing team, Stephen Ambrose is one of those rare authors whose name appears in larger font than the book in question. Unfortunately, the snowball has accumulated far too much mass to be stopped: this relatively weak work, which appears to be 80% a homage to George McGovern,...
Note that I wrote this review before the plagarism controversy. See my review of Wings Over MorningAmbrose became a widely popular popularizer of World War II history and he has managed to churn out several in the past few years that focus on the common soldier experience. Joseph Heller, author of ...