I have for years been fascinated by disasters, most notably the Titanic is my #1 fixation, but occasionally I spread my wings and read other books about disasters. Sometimes these are ones that I have seen a film/documentary based on, or like this one, that I have never heard of before, until the cover/title caught my eye in a charity shop.
I thought this would be a fascinating look into a mysterious plane crash from 1947. Instead what I got was a very back and forth, heavily padded story, which you don't learn anything new from. There's no insight into why the plane crashed, or what the final "STENDEC" morse code message would mean. (The author has listed some passable examples of what it could mean and some completely silly ones.) It just seems to be a book laden down with rumours and what ifs. I know there's probably not much that can be told about it now, as a lot of the relatives of the people on the plane will have since passed. I am even reading this 20 years on from the publication and it just felt ill-thought out at times.
There was way too much focus on other "Star" planes, and how they ran and incomplete biographies of the passengers and crew. The passengers and crew biographies seem shoehorned in as a last minute addition, because ideally to me, they should have been at the beginning. They also seemed to run into each other, and I struggled to differentiate from each person. Perhaps it was the way the author was writing it, but I found it difficult to get much enthusiasm going for this.
There also seems to be heavy reliance on padding the book out with other subjects that don't matter. The war. Politics. Who found the plane wreckage first. The Don Bennett sections could have been a biography themselves, without detracting from the storyline about the Star Dust. But it seemed to be that the story of Star Dust wouldn't have covered more than a couple of chapters.
The whole back and forth irritated me as well. Normally I can handle books that flip back and forth in time, but the telling of this, seemed to keep the reader away from the main reason they'd picked up the book - to find out more about Star Dust.
I suppose much like another famous disappearance from a similar time, Amelia Earhart, we'll never truly know what happened. I guess much like Everest etc, the bodies/plane wreckage are still up there. The book just ends, talking about a leather wallet being found near the wreckage, and then we move onto the bibliography. I did expect that I wasn't going to get a satisfactory ending, or all the wreckage has been taken away and all the bodies have been identified, but at the same time, I did feel slightly cheated after wading through 250 pages. It is quite possibly that the author just run out of stuff to pad out the book with.
This was a thoroughly disappointing telling of what should be a more well known disaster, and I doubt I would recommend this book, or keep it on my shelf. Perhaps I was just the wrong audience for this and didn't have enough general knowledge about planes, but I think the author could have condensed this down quite significantly, and held my interest in Star Dust more.