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Mass Market Paperback Hot Shots: America's First Jet Aces Book

ISBN: 0380817675

ISBN13: 9780380817672

Hot Shots: America's First Jet Aces

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Gripping firsthand accounts from America's Korean War aerial aces--the Hot Shots who took to the Asian skies in Mustangs, Sabres, and Shooting Stats--tell stories of courage, duty, and awesome ability from an all-important chapter of America's military history. photo insert. (June)

Customer Reviews

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Great stories & concise overview of air war & conflict

If you are interested in air combat, this book is definitely worth reading.It's a very enjoyable read. Most of the book consists of firsthand accounts by US fighter & fighter-bomber pilots. Mostly F-51 ground attack & F-86 MiG alley encounters, with a few other types & situations included. Interspersed among the flying stories is a great overview of the air war in Korea, and a concise summary of the overall conflict. This helps place the flying stories in the context of the time, and is very well done. Also covers the experiences of POW's.Gives a good feel for how unprepared the US was at the beginning of the conflict. Covers the retreat from the initial North Korean attack, the defense of the Pusan perimeter, the landings at Inchon and subsequent advance into North Korea, the Chinese entry into the war and retreat back to South Korea, then the stabilization around the 38th parallel. Gives a good account of efforts to develop tactics for air warfare in the jet age. Also covers the "honchos" - Russian & Warsaw Pact pilots flying the MiG 15 against the "hot shots" in their Sabres.Finally, covers the POW experience of fliers captured and interned in China for 2 years after the war ended. A number of these men (less than 35, but the exact number is not given) never came back, and were never accounted for. Mentions the similar circumstances of hundreds of Vietnam War aviators. Many believed to have ended up in China & Russia, but there is no firm accounting of their fate. As the authors said in the last line of the book, "May their sacrifice not be in vain."
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