Biggles is involved in 13 different action-packed incidents in 'Biggles of the Fighter Squadron'. It is towards the end of World War I and he has to be at his best to devise some outrageous, cunning and desperate schemes to down some German ace pilots, to rescue some of his pals or simply to stay alive to fight another day.
For instance he teaches a cocky young pilot, Henry Watkins fresh out of flying training, how to attack the Germans and return safely. Watkins, who does shoot down a German flyer, ignores Biggles' advice and fails to return from a sortie so Biggles has to fly out to find him, shoot down a few Germans on the way, and escort Watkins safely home; he then gives him a dressing down and stresses that he must follow orders in the future. Watkins is suitably chastised.
Biggles also gets entangled in a German squadron's flight and has to cleverly work his way out of it before he is spotted by the other German flyers or shot down by anti-aircraft fire by his own side as he flies over British lines. He manages to perform a miracle by disappearing in cloud and then finding his way safely back home.
He also encounters an eccentric old man who has designed and manufactured from bits of all sorts of metal his own aircraft, complete with a special bomb that he reckoned would undoubtedly end the war if the government would sanction it. Biggles flies the 'plane, drops the bomb but with disastrous consequences! However, once more, this time bedraggled, he eventually finds his way safely back to base.
In a bizarre way he also befriends an ace German flyer when meeting in combat; Biggles' aircraft develops a fault and, sportingly, the German escorts him safely home rather than shoot him down. Biggles later comes across the same flyer in a mass dog-fight and he returns the favour by not finishing the German off when his 'plane develops problems - all very gentlemanly!
Whilst the stories are all relatively exciting and action-packed I prefer Biggles when he is involved in a full-length adventure where the action is continuous throughout and the reader wonders what is going to happen next. The stories are so short in 'Biggles of the Fighter Squadron', the full thrill of the read is disseminated every dozen or so pages when one short story ends, sometimes abruptly, and another begins.