Not exactly a day-to-day account of life in the Eighth Air Force, but very close. Astor does an excellent job of introducing us to not just the famous leaders like Ira Eaker, Jimmy Doolittle and Curtis LeMay, but also to ordinary pilots, navigators, bombardiers, air gunners, mechanics, ground crews, ordnancemen, and all the rest of the men who flew and maintained the bombers and fighters.
He does an excellent job of analyzing the virtues and vices of the various aircraft and the various models flown by the 8th as they were introduced. He writes with real authority on this.
When it comes to various of the 8th's operations, I feel he could have done a better job explaining how they were planned, led and executed. I was particularly annoyed by his coverage of the infamous 1943 Black Thursday" Raid, where the Mighty Eighth committed 278 B-17s to the strike and lost 60 of them, plus damage ranging from light to write-off to all but about 30 of the aircraft that survived the mission. However, he makes up for it with the analysis of what the 8th AIr Force accomplished in the three years they fought in the war-torn skies of Europe, and of their establishment of a tradition unique to the air forces of the world: that once committed to battle, no United States Air Force bomber force has EVER turned back.
If you are a student of World War II in Europe, this book belongs on your bookshelf.