Overall, this was a good book. It was organized by the International Society of Women Airline Pilots, so it heavily features pilots who know each other. So, missing the stories of many other important women pilots who just werent in this crew of friends. But thus, it also heavily features many of the women who were the first women pilots hired at their airline -- United, American, Frontier, you name it -- and of course, the ground-breaking Beverly Bass, who was the first woman captain at American Airlines as well as one of the captains who brought a 747 into Gander Newfoundland on 9/11. It left me with the profound impression: The first women ever allowed to fly comercial airliners started 50 years ago (1971-1973 thereabouts) and are alive and well today, still flying (for fun, now retired from commercially). Women's equality is so young. Some of my favorite stories were some spectacular stories of women competently and calmly dealing with emergencies. The pilot of the Aloha Airlines flight that had its roof ripped off in flight over Maui, pilots who were check airmen (yes that's **still** the term, infuriating) on the Sully investigation (and were featured in the Sully movie!), pilots flying thru 9/11, flying thru IFR emergencies back with fewer technological resources. One particular story was so in-love with the sights, sounds, smells, and feeling of flying that it could make anyone fall in the love with aviation. So many of these women had tons of doubters, but importantly, so many of them also had someone in their life who told them they could do anything. So many of them had sons who, when asked as children if they wanted to be pilots, replied, "No, that's a girl's job." It's a reminder that all we know is what cultural experiences teach us, whether or not it's actually true/reality, and thus it shapes our beliefs and choices. Its a reminder that we need to believe in a person's potential, unconditionally, and give them the support and encouragement to break barriers. Thank you to Dr. Danny Guest for buying this as a Christmas gift and as a thank you for taking him up on a flight in my club's airplane. I'm glad to have read it.