Who minds to the dust returning,
Who shrinks from the sable shore,
Where the high and haughty yearning
Of the soul shall be no more?
So stand by your glasses steady,
This world is a world of lies;
A cup to the dead already,
Hurrah! for the next man who dies
When I picked it up as a novel, it turned out to be an anthology of 17 short stories. Stories about how James Bigglesworth (who represents the daring, deadly and carefree spirit of R.F.C during WWI ) got involved in various missions throughout WWI as a pilot. Those short stories depicted the day-to-day activities, emotions, bravado, frequent deaths and dangers, coincidences, and last but not least, romances in the lives of WWI pilots.
This book could be a perfect starting point for a young or new reader to know more about WWI aviation and aviators. Initially, you may experience a bumpy ride, but once you get hold of the bearing of the writer's style of writing, the rest of the flight will be swift and smooth. The book is full of footnotes explaining numerous words used during wartime.
Overall, it's a good read, and your time will fly swiftly with Biggles and his Camel.
Favourite Quotes:
1. Many of the lessons which we learned in the hard school of war are being rapidly obscured by the mists of peace-time theory
2. In peace a man may make a mistake—and live. He may not even know of his mistake. If he makes that same mistake in war—he dies, unless it is his lucky day, in which case the error is so vividly brought to his notice that he is never guilty of it again
3. This game (war) makes an old man of a young one without him knowing it. That's the truth.