This gripping five-star read hooked me from start to finish. Listening at 3x speed, I devoured three hours of historical excellence.
As a child, I read a Braille excerpt of Eddie Rickenbacker's 24-day ordeal adrift in the Pacific, and the story never left me. Discovering this full-length account sparked pure joy.
Wukovits vividly captures Rickenbacker's saga. Early chapters trace his life as a racecar driver, racetrack owner, and World War I ace with 26 kills. (Incidentally, he promised a case of Scotch to any World War II flyer who beat his record. When a pilot nailed kill 27 on his way to 40, Rickenbacker sent the scotch.
In October 1942, Rickenbacker, tasked with delivering secret orders to General Douglas MacArthur in New Guinea, survived a plane crash that left eight men clinging to three life rafts.
The author's prose makes you feel their thirst, sunburned agony, hunger, and wavering hope. Suspense builds, even if you know the outcome.
Moments of divine intervention-like a tern landing on Rickenbacker's head, providing raw sustenance, or a fish caught to feed them for days-feel miraculous. Storms bring water when they're desperate, and one veers away only to return after a collective prayer, turning skeptics into believers.
The final chapter covers their rescue and recovery, plus a surprisingly cordial Rickenbacker/MacArthur meeting.
Was Rickenbacker a hero or a tyrant? Wukovits leaves you pondering his complex legacy--likely both, like many of us.
If you love immersive history, this is a must-read. You'll feel every wave of their ordeal.