Inside the gunners' turrets of World War II's finest fighter aircraft In this superb book, aviation experts Donald Nijboer and Dan Patterson expose the firing positions of World War II aircraft and show the gunners' turrets in which so many young airmen fought and died. Here are the stories from veteran gunners that describe in spirited detail what it was like to fly in and fight from World War II's classic aircraft. Gunner provides documented accounts of men who learned to shoot at moving targets from a moving platform, facing the terrible odds of survival in this highly dangerous combat environment. Aircraft profiled
Donald Nijboer is a freelance writer who lives in Toronto, Canada. He teaches courses in radio and broadcasting at Humber College of Technology and Advanced Learning.
His books have been published by the Boston Mills Press and Osprey Publishing.
He has also written articles for Flight Journal, Aviation History and Aeroplane Monthly.
The first half of the book briefly goes through the air war and the development of the powered turrets on the bombers in WW2. Unfortunately, it's not detailed enough technically. For example, it does not even discuss the gunsights or the ammunition feeding mechanism of these turrets. The readers are left puzzling why a hand-held machine gun is inferior to a turret-mounted gun.
The second half of the book iterates through the defensive guns of the major heavy and medium bombers. Again, there is no deep dive into the technical side.
The most valuable portion of the book is the accounts, in their own words, of the air gunners. They talk about the airplanes, the missions, the fights, the boring, and the excitement. Interspersed within the air war history and the aircraft briefing, these memories make up for the weakness of the other materials in this book.
For all the endless volumes written about combat pilots (and to a lesser extent, bombardiers and navigators), aerial gunners have always gotten relatively short shrift, credit, or appreciation in the writings of most aerial combat historians, so the authors of "Gunner," Messrs. Nijboer and Patterson, seek to rectify this shortcoming, and they've done an admirable job of it.
Superbly detailed text and photographs alike. I especially like the section on the Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bomber (my favourite WWII warbird) and Nijboer's statistics on the SBD's air-to-air kill tally.