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All Is Fair

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World War II historical fiction filled with action, adventure, and just enough romance. This novel "captivates readers from beginning to end." *

Jan Orlinski, fighter pilot in training and pianist at large, watches as his country is devastated by the German blitzkrieg of 1939. Anxious to do his part in The Great War, Jan makes his way to England where, during a particularly heavy day of combat, he crashes into the English Channel and is captured by the Germans.

Driven by his desire to return to his first love, newspaper reporter Sophie Gordon, Jan escapes from the German prison and begins making his way back to England, via Spain, where he is, again, captured and imprisoned—this time, for the remainder of the war.

Once liberated, Jan soon learns he has been betrayed in ways that will forever change his life. Feeling lost, he escapes to Paris to start life anew—and finds his future is not at all what he envisioned.

280 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 25, 2022

3 people are currently reading
2 people want to read

About the author

Michael Kenneth Smith

9 books26 followers
MICHAEL KENNETH SMITH is the author of six historical novels including the international Amazon bestseller, The Postwoman, based on the true story of WWII Resistance fighter, Andreé De Jongh. Trained as a mechanical engineer, Smith turned to writing after building—and selling—a successful auto parts business. Storytelling is his lifelong passion.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Norm Goldman.
199 reviews8 followers
December 8, 2022
Unless you are a history maven, you probably are unfamiliar that thousands of Polish airmen served in the Royal Air Force (RAF) in England as crew members of fighters and bombers. They were the most significant foreign force within British aviation. One air unit was the 303 Squadron, which included famous aces such as Josef František, Witold Urbanowicz, and Jan Zumbach.

Michael Kenneth Smith’s All is Fair tells the fictionalized story of an ace Polish airman, Jan Orlinski, who began training as a fighter pilot in 1938 in Poland at eighteen. He attends the prestigious Air Force Academy of Poland in Deblin, where he becomes an outstanding, fearless pilot. Unfortunately, Poland is invaded by the Germans in 1939, and the Luftwaffe bombers attacked the Deblin airfield. Jan joins the battle but is shot down and winds up on a farm suffering from several cracked ribs.

Jan plans to proceed to France through Romania, where he believes the French modern fighter planes might be adequate to deal with the German Messerschmitt and continue the struggle against the Germans.

Jan finds his way with two other fighter pilots, Syd and Withhold, to Romania, where they are not welcomed and almost end up in prison. They receive orders from the Polish consul in Bucharest to board a ship and sail to Beirut, where they would meet another boat to Marseille. France was eager to recruit competent airmen, as many of theirs were killed in action.

However, the French generally rejected the combat experience of the three Polish airmen and they were not permitted to fly the more sophisticated French aircraft.

After the Germans bombarded France, Polish airmen were instructed by their superiors to leave France and head for England. They were warned that an attack on the British mainland was inevitable and that Britain badly needed them.

Jan lands in Liverpool, England on the Arandora Star without his two friends, with whom he will later reconnect. For the first two weeks, Jan never sees the inside of an airplane. He attends classes to learn British fighter tactics and eventually is assigned to fly a single-seat fighter aircraft known as The Hurricane. He becomes part of the 303 Polish fighter squadron.

One evening, after his inaugural flight in a Hurricane, Jan meets in a dance hall a pretty woman, Sophie Gordon, and he is instantly smitten. The two have something in common when Jan tells Sophie he is a pianist.

The couple commence a passionate love affair, but little does Jan realize who Sophie is and what role she will play in his life.

Once again, Jan experiences a near-life and death encounter. While flying for the British, he is shot down in the North Sea, wrecking his Hurricane, and lands near a German rescue buoy. He is transferred to Dulag Luft, a German prisoner of war camp. He escapes the camp and while trying to cross the Pyrenees is captured and shipped to Spain’s infamous concentration camp, Mirando de Ebro, where he spends four hundred and twenty-one days in captivity.

During all of his escapades Jan loses his best friend, he becomes skeptical about Sophie's faithfulness, and to top it off, he gets into an unfortunate argument with another Polish airman, who suffers a head injury and dies. Before their entanglement, the Polish airman had made some denigrating remarks about Sophie.

Smith’s realism stands out in the story, making its historical setting immediate and vivid. He seamlessly integrates known facts with fiction regarding actual events of the Polish airmen who heroically fought on behalf of England in World War ll. The narrative is intricately sketched and effectively constructed. Finally, Smith keeps you speculating who is the real Sophie Gordon with a concluding twist that you may or may not see coming.

Follow Here https://waa.ai/fYas To Read Norm's Interview With Michael Kenneth Smith


Profile Image for Grady.
Author 51 books1,839 followers
March 24, 2023
‘All is fair in love and war’ - An exceptionally fine historical novel

Author and master storyteller Michael Kenneth Smith trained as a mechanical engineer, owned and operated a successful auto parts business, and after twenty years, retired to fish, golf, cook, play bridge, and become an oenophile (a lover or connoisseur of wine), socialized, and even edited a local newspaper – his introduction to the written word. He now adds publishing novels to his resume – his novels being the highly regarded HOME AGAIN, SCARRED, THE POSTWOMAN, THE THIN GRAY LINE, IN THE SHADOW OF GOLD and now ALL IS FAIR.

Having successfully examined the Civil War and its effects and aftermath in other novels, Michael now adds the same diligence in focusing on WW II, creating a novel that underscores his ability to create credible characters with whom the reader can identify. Jan Orlinski is Polish, and in 1938 he is applying to the Air Force Academy of Poland, and once accepted that novel takes flight: ‘Jan Orlinski, fighter pilot in training and pianist at large, watches as his country is devastated by the German blitzkrieg of 1939. Anxious to do his part in The Great War, Jan makes his way to England where, during a particularly heavy day of combat, he crashes into the English Channel and is captured by the Germans. Driven by his desire to return to his first love, newspaper reporter Sophie Gordon, Jan escapes from the German prison and begins making his way back to England, via Spain, where he is, again, captured and imprisoned—this time, for the remainder of the war. Once liberated, Jan soon learns he has been betrayed in ways that will forever change his life. Feeling lost, he escapes to Paris to start life anew—and finds his future is not at all what he envisioned.’

The author’s keen ability for adroitly detailing aircraft maneuvers is blended with both terrifying martial events and romance, making this novel completely satisfying on multiple levels. This is a very fine novel - highly recommended.
308 reviews3 followers
March 13, 2026
All Is Fair by Michael Kenneth Smith delivers an engaging blend of wartime action, adventure, and romance set during World War II.

Jan Orlinski’s journey from a fighter pilot in training to a prisoner of war struggling to return home creates a compelling narrative filled with danger, determination, and emotional twists. The story balances the harsh realities of war with personal relationships and betrayal, making it a gripping read for fans of historical fiction.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews