

David P. (dez) - , reviewed on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This novel gave me a good overview of civilian piloting in Britain in the 1930s, how cities competed to build airfields and how amateur pilots learned to fly. The postwar part of the book gives an authentic account of what it was like to pilot passenger planes across the Pacific, and ends with an exciting adventure in Tasmania where the hero flies a bush plane to a remote mountain top airstrip to rescue a fellow pilot.
It is a better read than Shute's On the Beach.
It is a better read than Shute's On the Beach.
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