



The Spirit of Attack
Fighter Pilot Stories
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3.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $3.99
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- $3.99
Publisher Description
Scramble! In a couple of minutes, my wingman and I would be airborne on another adventure. Sometimes we intercepted an airliner, sometimes a misplaced B-52 bomber, and sometimes, Russian bombers probing our defenses; Russian warships; MIG fighters; or “troops in contact” in Vietnam, calling for napalm only yards from their positions. Twice it was UFOs—unidentified flying objects!
This book is a series of short stories supported by more than ninety photographs. The first part has my own stories; later stories were contributed by my fellow pilots. The last story is from WWII, of our P-38 fighters attacking the Romanian oil fields and getting badly mauled by defending Romanian fighters—and a Romanian pilot's view of the battle!
“Only the spirit of attack borne in a brave heart will bring success to any fighter aircraft, to matter how highly developed the aircraft may be.” That quote from Adolf Galland, an ace of the German Luftwaffe in WWII, was the motto of our 317th Fighter Interceptor Squadron in Alaska. The fighter pilot is a hunter, and his quarry is the most dangerous in the world: men who want to kill him! The best defense is a good offense—attack!
The US Air Force had a program called “Every Man a Tiger.” A tiger does not kill impulsively or in anger, but plans his attack carefully and strikes with cool ferocity. We were tigers!
Fighter pilots tell stories around the bar, but they seldom write them down. These stories were written by the fighter pilots themselves! Come with me, and hear of the beauty of flight, the mortal danger of electrical power failure at night in a snowstorm, and the thrill of attack with 20-mm cannons firing right under your feet!
Customer Reviews
Book for those who love to fly
Gordon takes you along through his experiences on the ground and in the air. Most books on fighters give you the stats and facts. Gordon brings you into the cockpit, gives the feelings and facts, but doesn’t hesitate to bring up a pilot’s view on how to fly an F-102 or a Six- both tactics and cockpit skills. This book rolls rapidly along, and I was dreading that it had to end. And the 102 and esp the Six were beautiful birds!