The war is a war of machines; it will be won on the assembly line. - Lord Beaverbrook, Minister of Aircraft Production
Just as vital as the battle on land or the struggle at sea, the air war ultimately tipped the balance of power in World War II. Many campaigns rode on the capabilities of their airforce, as British Spitfires were pitted against Messerschmitt Bf 109s and Japanese Zeros.
Aerospace expert David Baker explores this battle in the skies, detailing the technical leaps that were made and little-known histories about the men and women involved, from pilots to factory workers. Featuring magnificent photographs and illustrations, The Aerial War gives a brilliant insight into many key battles and highlights the integral role that aviation played in securing an Allied victory.
Britain wins the war! What do you mean there were other countries involved? No there weren't! Us superior Brits did it all by ourselves with our magnificent aircraft.
Abandoned at Page 102.
This was a wiffly-waffly biased account of WW2 with a mild slant towards aviation. No real detail of the aircraft involved and almost a total disregard of the fact that WW2 involved places other than Britain. Like - you know - THE PACIFIC. I sometimes think the Poms hate to admit that if it wasn't for the USA and a bunch of other countries, they'd all be speaking German about now.
No wonder this book was just $5 at a reject book store.
I received a free copy via Netgalley in exchange for a honest review.
Although it was of interest to me, unfortunately it felt like I was being bombarded with numbers rather than information about the aircraft flying during the World war II. A real disappointment.
It was ok, Author is in love with the Americans. Absolutely nothing written about Canadians nor BCATP. Disappointed and will add a note to my Cdn library reviews of.