Lost at Sea
Eddie Rickenbacker's Twenty-Four Days Adrift on the Pacific--A World War II Tale of Courage and Faith
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
The forgotten story of American war hero Eddie Rickenbacker's crash landing in the Pacific during World War II, and his incredible twenty-three-day crusade to keep his crew alive
In the darkest days of World War II, an unlikely civilian was sent to deliver a letter from Washington to General MacArthur in New Guinea. Eddie Rickenbacker was a genuine icon, a pioneer of aviation, the greatest fighter pilot of the First World War, recipient of the Medal of Honor, who’d retired to become a renowned race car driver. Now in his fifties, one of the most admired men in America, Rickenbacker was again serving his nation, riding high above the Pacific as a passenger aboard a B-17.
But soon the plane was forced to crash-land on the ocean surface, leaving its eight occupants adrift in tiny rubber life rafts, hundreds of miles from the nearest speck of land. Lacking fresh water and with precious little food, the men faced days of unrelenting sun, followed by nights shivering in the cold, fighting pangs of hunger, exhaustion, and thirst, all the while circled by sharks. Each prayed to see a friendly vessel on the horizon, and dreaded the arrival of a Japanese warship. Meanwhile, as the US Navy scoured the South Pacific, American radio and newspapers back home parsed every detail of Rickenbacker's disappearance, and an adoring public awaited news of his fate.
Using survivors’ accounts and contemporary records, award-winning author John Wukovits brings to life a gripping story of survival, leadership, and faith in a time of crisis.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Historian Wukovits (Dogfight over Tokyo) delivers an immersive account of wartime disaster and survival. On Oct. 21, 1942, WWI fighter ace and airline executive Eddie Rickenbacker and seven others took off from Hawaii on a goodwill tour of U.S. bases in the South Pacific. After faulty navigation led their B-17 hundreds of miles off course, they ran out of fuel, crash-landed in the ocean, and escaped the sinking plane in three small life rafts. The 52-year-old Rickenbacker used "every trick" he knew to get his younger companions not to succumb to despair: "He loved hearing someone call him a son-of-a-bitch," writes Wukovits, "as it proved that the individual still retained the will to live." In addition to Rickenbacker's "hard-nosed determination," Wukovits credits "faith and prayer" with helping all but one member of the group to survive, and points out that the decision to separate the cluster of rafts to increase the odds of an airplane or ship spotting them—which Rickenbacker initially opposed—led to their discovery and rescue. Drawing largely from survivors' accounts, Wukovits viscerally describes their ordeal and conveys the miraculous nature of the outcome. Readers will be gripped.