“Now that Lindbergh has spoken, we inquisitors are apt to be disappointed, at least upon superficial reading of his story," noted Horace Green in his review of ‘WE’ in the New York Times in which he nonetheless applauded Lindbergh's meticulous attention to detail (e.g., flight logs and aeronautical minutiae). "Where is the 'inside' story that 50,000 advance buyers of the volume have been led to expect?” Green aptly asked. “There is none. And on second thought it is apparent that if the recital was to be in any degree a real Lindbergh product there could be no inside story. The young flying Colonel, as his friends know, has no Imagination in the personal sense, but great Imagination in the mechanical sense. His mind works without embroidery. He thinks and speaks in condensed terms suitable to his purpose. One is grateful to say that the delay in publication of the long heralded ‘WE’ whether brought about by Lindbergh's refusal to be stampeded or by the counsel of other heads, has permitted Lindbergh to tell his own story without the interpolations, as they are known in the editorial world, of too many ghosts."
Fewer than 40,000 words of this 318-page book were written by Lindbergh himself, which includes a bombastic five-page Foreword by U.S. Ambassador Herrick, seven pages of front matter, ten pages of photographs, and an 85-page essay by Fitzhugh Green entitled “A Little of What the World Thought of Lindbergh.” And of those 40,000 words, not one gives readers any insight into how Lindbergh felt about the whole enterprise and what it meant to him. And where was his father during this time, and why wasn’t he part of the celebrations following the historic transatlantic flight? Why were his parents living apart? Did he have a human love interest? These and many other lacunae and unanswered questions about Lindbergh would suggest that this book was largely written by the hungry ghosts who wanted to profit from his unprecedented fame.
That said, there is no one who did more for the development of commercial aviation than Lindbergh, who tirelessly devoted his life to promoting the creation of infrastructure to support major airline carriers and initiate the age of air travel.