Night Fighter
New York: Bantam Books, 1984. Bantam edition, Specially Illustrated Edition, First printing [stated]. Mass market paperback. xiii, [1], 222, [4] pages. Cover worn, soiled and creased. Includes Foreword by Air Chief Marshal Sir Basil Embry, and Introduction by Robert Spreckels, Ace German fighter-pilot of the Second World War. This book is an in-cockpit account of an ace British fighter pilot in furious battle against the Luftwaffe. Includes map of Western Europe. Beginning with his pre-war training, Commander J.R.D. Braham takes us battle-by-battle through that fateful afternoon in June, 1944, when he was shot down over occupied Denmark and taken prisoner. From the desperate nighttime sorties against the Luftwaffe's air strikes during the Battle of Britain to the daring daylight intruder raids against Hitler's crumbling Reich, his story reveals the skill, courage, and teamwork between pilot and navigator that made him one of the RAF's most deadly fighter pilots. Derived from a Kirkus review: War in the air...the most exciting, dangerous, and highly skilled form of duelling ever devised. Bob Braham joined the Royal Air Force in 1938. Once he had won his coveted wings, he quickly became one of the pilots selected to engage in a variety of specialized and daring missions, including helping with the development of early radar. He had already become an "ace" and been decorated several times when he was shot down, captured, and interned as a prisoner of war. Strangely enough, he was to meet the German pilot who had his plane, and the two men developed a friendship that to the extent that the former enemy has written the introduction to Braham's book. This is one of the most vivid and unobtrusively dramatic reports of its kind. More