My Interest
Once again I was in need of an audio book and found this gem in my library’s e-audio collection.
The Story
Mention “airship” and people today (well, those who don’t give you a blank look) think “Oh, the humanity!” or the Goodyear blimb that floats above events like the Super Bowl. The horrific Hindenburg disaster in 1937 is pretty much the end of travel by “blimp” aka “airship” or “Zeppelin” (yes, think Led Zeppelin), At one time, this was the “wave of the future” for long distance air travel according to some people. The Germans led the way with this. I found this book, about the British program to expand air travel to their vast colonial empire by using blimps–dirigibles, lighter-than-air ships, Zeppelin-like gas bags. From World War I until World War II travel by ship the by train then by car was still the way to go from London to Mombai [then called Bombay] or to anywhere in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, or Hong Kong. All of Britain’s African colonies, plus their other Asian colonies were so far afield that have a meeting in person took about a month of travel (round-trip) and this was AFTER the Suez canal was built.
The British airship R-101 should have put paid to any country’s airship travel plans, but sadly, it didn’t–the Germans went right on with their program. What could go wrong with people flying a flammable bag of gas contained in recycled cattle guts in uncontrollable weather, with no radar, Ewww, you say? Read on!
The problems here concern bad science (nothing new about that–think “phrenology”) poor engineering, and Imperial delusions of grandeur by foes Germany and the United Kingdom. Just for fun, throw in a little-known princess as a romantic interest and you have a novel that would have been rejected. Except, this is NON-fiction! Lives were lost from stubbornness, stupidity, politics, and patriotism. Imagine!
My Thoughts
This book is the best kind of nonfiction–it reads like a novel. I found the whole story fascinating. I nodded my head in agreement with the judgement on many things. I also felt the loss of human life as I listened.
My Verdict
4.0