THE WORLD WAR TWO GROUP discussion

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Fighter Group
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2013 - March - "Fighter Group" by Jay Stout

What is this thing?
This trance I'm in?
I know not what death brings.
I know she's gone,
Her soul has fled,
But to me her sweet voice rings.
She lingers in this very room,
She directs me in my role.
I know she dwells not with the dead,
She lives within my soul.


“The other day, Joe, after towing the target sleeve for our aerial gunnery, buzzed the field and pulled the lever which is supposed to release the long cable and target. Then he peeled up, dumped the gear, and came in to land.” Unbeknownst to Gerst, the cable and target sleeve did not separate from his aircraft. Unawares, he continued his turning approach to land. Fahrenwald remembered: “Joe dragged the cable, plus a fifty-pound lead weight down through the Republic’s parking lot and beat in about fifty shiny automobile tops, hoods, windshields, and such, and then through the sentry box.” The sentry was found unhurt, albeit speechless. – I don’t blame him!


I am sure you will enjoy this book while relaxing on your porch swing, maybe with a cold beer?

George Preddy, always eager to be in the air, hadn't changed. Ralph Hamilton remembered that the first available aircraft was wrecked almost immediately and that Preddy wasted no time climbing into the next one as soon as it arrived. "He gave us a great buzz job; as he went across the field, he pulled up into a barrel roll. There was no problem, but he soon discovered that his landing gear was still extended. I don't think he ever lived that one down!"
George Preddy's 'Cripes A'Mighty'



Enjoy the tour Brad, I would love to do that sometime.

That's a good idea, you could try and see what happens :)




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For more info on this German pilot:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinz_Knoke
And his book:


It is interesting to compare the RAF remarks on losing bombers on the night missions. It seems impersonal, they see them go down but it is just a ship. When Bomber Command tries to restart daylight bombing in fall of 1944, suddenly they are watching their mates go down and it seems to have a much greater impact on morale.


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The story about how they managed to fly back after tearing off one of the Walrus' pontoons was also very interesting.

For more info on this German pilot:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/He..."
I interviewed and knew Heinz, great guy, loved his beer


somewhat tabloidy title, it's a fast paced
great read.
'Aussie Rick' wrote: "Also on pages 88-89 we have a good account from the German ace Heinz Knoke and how he nearly went down with his shot-up Me-109.
For more info on this German pilot:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/He..."

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(view spoiler) - author's italics.



My intent was to tell the entire story--good and bad--as truthfully as I could while still keeping the reader engaged. And I wanted to be certain that I told a good portion of it through the eyes and voices of the participants.
With that in mind, how do you like Ted Fahrenwald's letters?

I've really enjoyed reading Ted Fahrenwald's letters back home. The one on page 166 in regards to his incident whilst flying in cloud was interesting and funny, like this bit:
" ... I now go on instruments exclusively and work for a while to get [the] ship under control Finally the neddle and ball [are] centered and [I] commence a nice 200 mph letdown. Then I glance up and notice a quarter inch of loose dirt piled up on the glass OVER my head. By this oddity I gather that I've been flying inverted for some time ..."
He must have been some character!

http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/8...

Yes, from what I gather, Ted was one of those truly unique characters. He stayed that way until the very end...he passed in 2002, I believe. However, his dear friend "Mac" Mckibben is still very much with us and is a character in his own right. He was the one who took his P-47 boating in Long Island Sound.
Bob "Punchy" Powell is still very active as well. He helped me tons and tons. Had a lot of the unit's actual reports, etc. Don Bryan helped as well, but passed just before the book was published.
Ted actually wrote a book about his time with the Maquis after his aircraft went down. The manuscript sat around since 1946. His daughter shared some of the material with me and I helped steer her to a publisher. It was published last fall. Great little book: "Bailout over Normandy."

For those interested here is the book that Jay mentioned in regards to Ted Fahrenwald:


I should think so, Adam Makos and I have been selling well together also, as we have two interconnected books.

Knoke and Georg-Peter Eder and I along with Steinhoff, Krupinski and Hartmann has some good times. many others also. I miss them all, only a few left now.

And then...things started happening. Fate/luck is an odd thing.


The story of how Broadwater unselfishly gave his life to protect the bombers and the work done after the war by Thomas Clark, a radar navigator-bombardier aboard the lead B-17, to identify this brave Mustang pilot was truly touching and his story needs to be read.
This was the only information I could find on the Internet about Joe Broadwater:
http://army.togetherweserved.com/army...

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Geevee, Assisting Moderator British & Commonwealth Forces
(last edited Mar 29, 2013 03:09AM)
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Publishers pretty much leave me alone. Rarely do they offer suggestions about material. Of course, they (and me!) want to make sure that everything is accurate and that no one is being libeled, etc. But the onus is on the author especially nowadays when publishers just don't have the staff and resources that they used to enjoy.
One of the problems that I wrestle with is whether or not to include material that is similar to something else I've already done. There's only so much room in a book. For instance, there were more than 300 pilots in the 352nd...and 2,000 ground personnel. Not everyone can be in the book. There have been times when I've delberately not included someone with a neat experience just because they were jerks...and times when I included someone when I could have done without their story...just because I liked them and knew they would enjoy seeing their story in print. Perhaps it's not the best practice, but we're all human.

I missed this group read owing to my taking on a whopping WWI history but will certainly be reading your books in the near future.
All the best.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Men Who Killed the Luftwaffe: The U.S. Army Air Forces against Germany in World War II (other topics)Fortress Ploesti: The Campaign to Destroy Hitler's Oil Supply (other topics)
The Men Who Killed the Luftwaffe: The U.S. Army Air Forces against Germany in World War II (other topics)
Bailout Over Normandy: A Flyboy's Adventures with the French Resistance and Other Escapades in Occupied France (other topics)
I Flew for the Führer (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jay A. Stout (other topics)Jay A. Stout (other topics)
Ted Fahrenwald (other topics)
Heinz Knoke (other topics)
Jay A. Stout (other topics)
Description:
Part of the famed U.S. Eighth Air Force, the 352nd Fighter Group was one of World War II’s most decorated flying units. In Fighter Group, Jay A. Stout delivers a gripping account of the “Blue Nosed Bastards of Bodney,” so named for the blue-painted noses of the unit’s planes and their base of operations in England.
The 352nd fought the Luftwaffe in 420 missions in the European Theater, accounting for 776 enemy aircraft destroyed—fourth among all 8th Air Force units. Stout takes us into the skies over Nazi Germany as he offers vivid descriptions of fierce aerial combat in P-47 Thunderbolts and P-51 Mustangs, as well as interviews with veterans and after-action reports.