A Royal Air Force pilot battles the Luftwaffe during World War II in Forsyth’s historical novel.
This third installment of the adventures of Allan Chadwick follows the RAF squadron leader into war, which will challenge his skills as a pilot and position him as a catalyst in the innovation of aviation technology. He’s soon commanding a front-line squadron of Spitfire fighter planes in the Battle of Britain and gets shot down several times—once parachuting into the English Channel—in the course of ferocious dogfights with Germany’s fearsome Messerschmitt 109s. Chadwick then goes to work in the obscure but vital area of electronic navigation aids intended to improve the woeful accuracy of British bomber aircraft. He’s in the thick of designing equipment that uses radio beams to guide warplanes precisely to their targets and then testing it on bombing runs over German-occupied Europe. On one raid he gets shot down over France and embarks on a picaresque journey in which he beds a farmer’s two daughters, falls in with the Resistance, and, finally, hijacks a Messerschmitt 110 back to Britain. Put in charge of a precision-bombing unit, he stages a raid on Berlin that interrupts a speech by Luftwaffe chief Hermann Goering, who vows to take personal vengeance for the humiliation. The author, a former RAF pilot, paints a vivid panorama of the air war, including the daily grind of fighter combat that left veterans haggard and twitchy with stress; the hours-long, freezing-cold bombing runs punctuated by storms of anti-aircraft fire; the hair-raising crash landings; and the numbing drumbeat of deaths. His writing mixes fascinating deep dives into the gadgetry and tactics of aerial combat with gripping action scenes conveyed in brutally evocative prose (“Ramsey was prostrate besides his seat, his body lacerated by dozens of shrapnel fragments. His head sagged, and Chadwick could see he was practically decapitated”). Chadwick is an appealing hero—stoic and resourceful, but quietly marked by the horrors unfolding around him.
A captivating war novel that immerses readers in the craft of killing and its somber results.