At the end of the Second World War over 55,000 air crew of Bomber Command had lost their lives, in this authoritative book, the Author selects a number of men, some well known like Leonard Cheshire, Hughie Edwards, but many less known such as Nick Knilans, Syd Clayton and Jo Lancaster, and details their careers, relating episodes that reflect the qualities that made them outstanding. Bomber Barons shows the development of Bomber Command from compartively unorganised, non-cohesive raids of the early part of the war to the highly-trained and deadly offensive weapon it became under Sir Arthur Harris, from 1942 AOC-in-C of Bomber Command, the greatest baron of them all.
Chaz Bowyer (1927-2008) was an aviation historian and author. He joined the RAF, aged 16, in 1942 and left it in 1969. Then he turned his hand to his life-long passion for aviation and started writing.
This book was first published in 1983 but remains an interesting and moving insight into the role and sacrifice of Bomber Command during WW2. The book focusses on the stories of a number of pilots and crew, a couple well known like Guy Gibson and Leonard Cheshire but others less remembered. There are accounts of immense bravery and survival , young men going out night after night , seeing friends killed, aircraft shot to pieces then volunteering for more. There are a good number of photos. I would recommend this to anyone but in particular those who talk of the destruction of German cities as a war crime should read these accounts then reflect.