Angels Eight

Normandy Air War Diary

by David Clark


Formats

Hardcover
£19.54
£18.75
Softcover
£12.80
£11.75
Hardcover
£18.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 18/06/2003

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 408
ISBN : 9781410722423
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 408
ISBN : 9781410722416

About the Book

Because Allied air superiority was so awesome in Normandy, many believe the German Luftwaffe did not appear at all. How surprising to learn that the fierce battle in the skies over the Normandy beaches was much like the Battle of Britain -- both in duration, about 80 days long, and in severity, about 3,000 aircraft shot down. Only one or two books deal with the aerial battle over Normandy and those that do treat it from the viewpoint of one nation. For the first time, the squadron records of German, American and British units in the Normandy Campaign reveal details of nearly every aerial encounter that occurred, provide tabulation of the number of losses and yield the names of the pilots who fought.

But to get a feeling of what it was like to be there, this book also describes the day-to-day lives of the members of one RAF Commonwealth wing flying Spitfires from French soil. It quotes the words of the participants as recorded in squadron records, memories of veterans and in the pilots’ combat reports. This is a book filled with factual detail written by one whose brother fought and died in the Normandy Air War.


About the Author

Dave Clark was only thirteen when his older brother was killed in a Spitfire in the skies over Normandy – seven days after D-Day. Years later, when he retired, he realized how little he knew about the circumstances of the tragic death and set about gathering research material from books, fellow amateur historians and original microfilms. He went to the UK and France, built a web site, participated actively in Internet bulletin boards devoted to World War II aviation and corresponded with veteran pilots. Four years later he had enough material to chronicle every major aerial encounter of fighters over Normandy. Combining this database with a day-by-day account of one RCAF wing of Spitfires provided enough material for a book.