The Royal Air Force is synonymous with its heroic achievements in the summer of 1940 when Winston Churchills famous few
- the Hurricane & Spitfire pilots of RAF Fighter Command
- held Goerings Luftwaffe at bay in the Battle of Britain thereby changing the course of the war. For much of the twentieth century warplanes were fixed in the worlds imagination a symbol of the perils & excitements of the modern era. But within the space of a hundred years military aviation has morphed from the exotic to the mundane. An activity which was charged with danger
- the domain of the daring
- is now carried out by computers & pilotless drones. Aviators have always seemed different to soldiers & sailors
- more adventurous questing & imaginative. Their stories gripped the public & in both wars & air aces dominated each sides propaganda capturing hearts & dreams. Writing with the verve passion & the sheer narrative aplomb familiar to many thousands of readers from his bestselling Second World War aerial histories Fighter Boys & Bomber Boys Patrick Bishops Wings is a rich & compelling account of military flying from its heroic early days to the present. Mr Bishop leads us brilliantly through these violent skies these men & women their machines & their terrible quandaries. Jonathan Glancey Country Life