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Twelve o'clock high: Screenplay

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"Consider Yourselves Dead!"...General Frank Savage told this to his men when he took over the 918th Bomb Group. They were cut by losses, weakened by endless bombing missions, but they were going back to battle...and Savage was no arm-chair pilot-he was going to lead the attack!

Unknown Binding

First published January 1, 1948

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Sy Bartlett

5 books

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Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews
Profile Image for Mike (the Paladin).
3,148 reviews2,139 followers
December 26, 2010
Just a flat good book!

This is another book I got interested in because of a movie AND an old TV show. The novel inspired by the story of the 8th Air Force in World War II and their valiant battle against enemy fighters, anti-aircraft fire (flak), and the inevitability of death in the relentless daylight bombing campaign they fought.

General Savage takes over a bombing group whose losses have all but broken their spirit and whose commander has cracked over his concern for the men under him. Savage must bring the men back to an ability to fight, even if they end hating him more than the Germans.

Another book I like and have liked immensely for years.
Profile Image for Phil Valentine.
Author 8 books46 followers
December 12, 2015
Frank Savage in the book was modeled after my great-uncle, Gen. Frank Armstrong, so I have to love this one, right? Well, I don't have to but I do. Not sure Armstrong was as badass as Savage but, in our family, we like to think so.
Profile Image for Michael David.
Author 3 books90 followers
March 22, 2017
Books I've been reading lately include early 20th century paperbacks printed by Signet, Bantam, or Penguin. Taking risks on the smutty covers has paid dividends: essentially, I was able to expand my appreciation towards literature, not only reading the classics.

This is a great WWII adventure featuring an air command with low morale and the general who whips them into shape through example. It's not going to be in the discussion for the greatest novels of all time, but it's an enjoyable yarn.
Profile Image for Mike (the Paladin).
3,148 reviews2,139 followers
November 26, 2009
This book is hard to track down but it is worth it if you can find it. A good war story (of WWII) that drew me in the first time I read it, almost 40 years ago. I still have a paper back copy of this novel that is more than 30 years old and"only just" holding together. This is one of those times when it's a great book and a great movie.
Profile Image for Andylm.
4 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2011
If you like the movie, you should read the book. Its been out of print for many years, and not yet on Kindle. But if you can find it, you won't be disapointed and it would be well worth the effort.
Profile Image for happy.
313 reviews107 followers
June 29, 2012
One of the first post war books to look at the 8th AF early campaign. I thought it was a good read. If you know the history of the 8th AF you can spot actual events that have been fictionalized.
217 reviews1 follower
February 25, 2019
An absorbing account of the rehabilitation of a "hard luck outfit" by a gung-ho general and die-hard active air bomber pilot. Very evocative of the old Quinn Martin TV series with Robert Lansing, Paul Burke , Chris Robinson, John Larkin, Andrew Duggan, Frank Overton, (haven't seen the Gregory Peck film, but will now have look for it,) highly cinematic.

Savage's climactc concluding mission is presumably realistic -- riveting, as tense and horrifying ...and heartbreaking, as war can get.
Profile Image for Jacob Hibbard.
13 reviews4 followers
February 26, 2019
There is a reason it is said that the greatest movie to come out of World War II came from the greatest novel to come out of WWII. Twelve O’Clock High! is the closest you will get to a realistic look at bomber pilots and crews of WWII. Authors Beirne Lay, Jr. and Sy Bartlett were both first-hand witnesses to the bravery and carnage that came out of the Eighth Air Force’s high altitude bombing runs.

This masterpiece is an absolute read for interests regarding WWII, the Air Force, and aviation.

Furthermore, it is an exposition on the qualities of leadership. Lay and Bartlett help the reader to gain an intimate understanding of the burden associated with tough leadership. Though it may cost him all that he has to give, Frank Savage is a tough man facing the daunting task of leading a failing bombing group back to fighting form.

The thoughts of Harvey Stovall, the character for which Dean Jagger won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor in the film version, describe best what kind of leader Frank Savage is: “For all these months he had thought of Brigadier General Frank Savage as a superman. Now he knew that Savage was not a superman . . . that he never had been. Rather, he saw Savage as a man who had made a superhuman effort. A man capable of giving everything that was in him . . . and then giving some more.”

This is the man who made leaders out of slackers; who pushed his men to give more than they ever thought they could; who always led by example, and never asked a man to do something he wouldn’t first do himself.

In this wonderfully told story, Savage himself discovers that a man can give a maximum effort - but the breaking point is so much further out than one expected. The resolve in these men to carry on and “take it” even when all seems lost is only achieved by great leadership. But great leadership comes at the great cost of self-sacrifice.
Profile Image for Andy.
160 reviews5 followers
April 25, 2012
More soap opera than action, all the action is on the ground until the end just like in the movie. The Gregory Peck character has a love interest that isn't in the film. The writing was kind of unpolished but I got used to it and this turned out to be pretty good.
Profile Image for Rafeeq O..
Author 11 books10 followers
June 5, 2025
Beirne Lay, Jr., and Sy Bartlett's 1948 Twelve O'Clock High! is a gripping novel of the early days of the air war in Europe, "in the Fall of 1942" (1965 Ballantine paperback, page 12), when the U.S. Army Air Force, despite lack of aircraft and woefully insufficient fighter escort coverage, and hence incurring staggering casualties, was trying to prove that daylight high-altitude strategic bombing--called "precision" bombing, though this was rather more a hope than actuality--could cripple the German war effort.

Most of us, perhaps, have come to the book through the 1949 black-and-white film starring Gregory Peck. If so, we already know the broad contours of the plot: a "hard luck" Bomb Group stationed in England is taking far more casualties than others, and Command believes this must be from weak leadership, so they replace the chummy Colonel with a hard-nosed newcomer to whip them back into military shape; the men hate him, but he is right, and eventually they are won over, becoming the proudest unit with the tightest formations, the best bombing, and the most accurate gunnery, until finally... Well, like I say, you know. Certainly I myself have spent many, many hours in this film over the years, and it is unimpeachable.

The book, naturally, is better--richer, more detailed, with occasionally fuller backstories, and revealed through additional perspectives. Here, for example, there are "old rivalries" (page 24) between Keith Davenport, commanding officer of the 918th, and the hard-hitting and exquisitely named Frank Savage who soon replaces him. Although Savage originally "got the dream assignment, leading the first ten missions here" (page 17), Davenport had been "surprised to see General Pritchard give him that first bomb group. Savage handles men like Simon Legree" (page 18).

Hmm... Or maybe Savage is simply a man of whom Major Stovall, adjutant of the 918th, would never think what he had of the affable Davenport: "Under the stress of combat, would [he] try to spare these crews the ultimate hardships and sacrifices, would losses overly upset him[,] and would he thereby lose his efficiency as a leader?" (page 15). See, it was "just four years ago" that Davenport was "ordered down to relieve [Savage] of his squadron" because "[h]e had been flying the boys ragged and sweating the ground personnel like a road gang. You'd have thought there was a goddam war on," Davenport clucks, "the way he ran the outfit" (page 18).

But now there is a goddam war on, isn't there? The time for allowing, even encouraging, bad morale by writing under a tacked-up poster's "confident slogan" of "Who's afraid of the new Focke-Wulf?" "I am," with the C.O.'s signature above all the others (page 37)-- Of a "dissipated" pilot who "had logged more hours at the card table in the club, cleaning out junior officers, than at the controls of a B-17" (page 46) "grounding himself against [the flight surgeon's] repeated recommendations" (page 47)-- Of armorers loading bombs too slowly and making the Group "fourteen minutes late at take-off" (page 57)-- Of inattentive post sentries and lack of salutes and slovenly housekeeping (pages 66-67)-- Those times are done, and Savage will make sure of it.

Now, yes, now and then there is some cliched stuff here, like Davenport's initial description to Stovall of the "good-looking bastard" Savage: "Dames love him and I wish I had a dollar for every quart of whisky he's drunk" (page 18). Overall, however, it isn't too intrusive, and we instead are swept up in the perils of the 918th and Savage's desperate efforts at reform, the influences of the general Savage "dryly" terms to Davenport "your pal Ed Henderson" (page 25), the interaction of the the female RAF officer who both attracts and rather threatens Savage, and the occasional mischiefs of the 918th's various personnel. Really, I won't spoil the plot, for there are differences between the novel and the film, with many new things to discover.

Beirne Lay, Jr., and Sy Bartlett's Twelve O'Clock High!, published only a few years after the capitulation of the Axis, when the memories of the brutal '42 and '43 air war over Europe were still terrifyingly fresh, will be a thoroughly enjoyable 5-star read for anyone interested in the Second World War, and especially in strategies and tactics of aerial combat of the propeller days.
Profile Image for Realini Ionescu.
3,481 reviews15 followers
September 20, 2025
Twelve O'Clock High, based on the novel by Sy Bartlett
9 out of 10


This motion picture is one of the rare productions, even more difficult to find in the age of Avengers, Fast and the Furious 23, wherein the public can find meaning, values and role models.

Real role models, not the Kardashian type.

The film has won two Oscars, one for the supporting role and was nominated for Best Film and Actor in a Leading Role:

The astounding, gigantic Gregory Peck.

This superb actor has the complex role of General Savage.

During World War II, many soldiers and officers have proved their bravery, skills, valor, patriotism and spirit of self sacrifice.
This drama tells the captivating, tremendous story of a group of airplane pilots that have to combat the enemy in the skies.

They also need to bomb in the most difficult of circumstances...
During the day!

This is to ensure accuracy in an age when they did not have guided missiles and precision bombs that could use their GPS and land where designated.
In the begging of the feature, the problem is that these valiant men get killed at a terrible rate.

General Savage and general Pritchard visit the bombing unit and try to find explanations for and more importantly solutions to the horrible death rate.
The colonel in command of the squad is dedicated, brave, loyal to his men.

Indeed, for General Savage this is exactly the problem:

Over identification

He fights for his pilots to the end.
Nothing they do can make him assign blame.

One navigator has made a mistake which seems to have caused all the unit to be late and then accumulate losses.
The commander takes all the blame, explains that the navigator wants to do so much, he is under pressure...

Yes, that is probably...surely understandable, but this is much too serious to allow for human casualties to continue...
At the present rate, there would be nobody left soon.

Therefore General Savage takes over the unit.
He brings in not just discipline, but what seems to be an excessive cruelty...

He closes the bar, talks abuse to the pilots, makes one fly the "Leper colony".
This is however meant to provoke and wake those pilots from stupor.

The first results?
They all ask to be transferred and escape this mad General.

He delays the processing of the papers and then, gradually they become very close.
Indeed, Over Identification seems to be back again...

With a vengeance.

General Savage even enters a severe state of shock, due in part to his strong bonds with his unit.

This is a stupendous film, educational, worthwhile...indeed, it is alone worth half, maybe 80% of the regrettable blockbusters launched in cinemas in this age of the Sequel, Cartoon, Marvel, Disney character.
75 reviews
August 16, 2025
I first saw the movie a long time ago and really enjoy it to this day. The book isn't quite the same but it still gives you a glimpse into the burden that all military personnel, particularly those in the first air squadrons overseas in WWII, carry. The stress of death all around them, losing close friends and squadron-mates, the uncertainty of every day, the inability to really live life because they did not know what tomorrow brought - these are the specters that appear on every page.

I honestly thought the romance between Frank and Pamela was superfluous but, by the end, it did hammer home the above truths, although McIllhenny's story did it better. I'm glad Bishop got to see the wall of American fighters.
Profile Image for Patrick Macke.
986 reviews11 followers
April 15, 2024
Not what I expected but still quite enjoyable ... I never saw the movie or the TV series but I did read the epic "Masters of the Air" by Donald L. Miller and in that book he mentions "Twelve O'clock High" and the authors Lay and Bartlett, authentic bomber pilots who participated in some of the most storied bombing raids of World War II ... This led me to believe this book would be about bombing runs and dogfights, it's not, it's about the behind the scenes war fought by a bomber wing and the man who commands them ... Good WWII yarn
Profile Image for Sheila.
582 reviews2 followers
January 8, 2020
I ordered in this re-processed film after reading about it in the book, Triggers by Marshall Goldsmith, page 64. He describes it as, "a step by step illustration of situational leadership. [...] Gregory Peck, playing WWII general Frank Savage, displays all four leadership styles as he remodels a "bad luck" American bomber squadron into fighting trim."
Profile Image for John.
5 reviews2 followers
September 18, 2020
One of the best WWII novels ever written and the basis for the movie of the same name.

If you have any interest in the air war over Europe this is a MUST READ.
13 reviews
June 23, 2025
Simply the best novel to come out of WW II.
2 reviews
July 22, 2022
Does anyone know why this great classic hasn’t been reprinted and isn’t on Kindle?
Profile Image for Tracy.
68 reviews1 follower
October 8, 2016
This is one of those books I just could not put down.
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews

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