Spitfires The American women who flew in the face of danger during World War II

Becky Aikman

Book - 2025

The heart-pounding true story of the daring American women who piloted the most dangerous aircraft of World War II through the treacherous skies of Britain.

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Published
New York, NY : Bloomsbury Publishing 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Becky Aikman (author)
Physical Description
xv, 345 pages, 16 unnumbered leaves of unnumbered plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [289]-333) and index.
ISBN
9781635576566
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

While the exploits of the Women Airforce Service Pilots in the U.S. are fairly well known to readers steeped in WWII history, Britain's Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA) and the American women who flew for it have been overlooked. Aikman mined letters, diaries, and newspaper articles as well as an enormous number of books containing material on the subject to craft this concise narrative about the ATA and the women who answered the call for recruits willing and able to fly anything and everything to assist in the war effort. From the relatively famous Jackie Cochran to a host of other largely forgotten aviatrixes, Aikman uncovers the stories of the daredevil pilots determined to defy the era's gender constraints. From adventures in the air to struggles on the ground, she writes of the drama involved in getting aircraft from factory to front line during the war. This joins such titles as Fly Girls (2018), The Women with Silver Wings (2020), and The Girls Who Stepped Out of Line (2021) as authors retrieve the stirring yet neglected history of brave flying women.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Women who dared. Journalist Aikman draws on diaries, letters, and interviews to create a brisk, lively account of nine intrepid American women, among the 25 who joined Britain's Air Transport Auxiliary, the civilian arm of the RAF. Unlike the U.S., which prohibited women from flying in the military, the U.K. was desperate for pilots. Responding to the need, star aviatrix Jackie Cochran sent invitations to 76 women with more than 300 hours of flying time, some as stunt flyers, crop dusters, or flying instructors. The American "Atta-Girls" came from widely varied backgrounds, from hardscrabble lives to high society; from America's youngest flying instructor, at 21, to a 32-year-old, the oldest and most experienced, with 1,800 flying hours. All were ambitious, defiant, eager to reinvent themselves. "Professionally," Aikman writes, "they mastered jobs that demanded technical expertise, physical strength, steely valor, and quick judgment." The first group to arrive in 1942 were shocked by bombed-out cities, food deprivations, and the chilly British homes where they were billeted. There was a chilly reception, too, caused by a stark cultural disconnect between the boisterous Americans and the upper-class British women of the ATA. Aikman recounts the pilots' friendships, romances, marriages, and losses, and the challenges they faced flying unfamiliar planes across unfamiliar terrain, sometimes in threatening weather. All confronted danger with every flight: "The knowledge that something as simple as an oil leak, a peculiar propeller mishap, a moment of inattention, or an unexpected conjuring of fog could bring about sudden, bolt-from-above death." By 1944, the original 25 had been depleted to 13. Despite hardship and fear, though, they depicted their years as an Atta-Girl as nothing less than a "golden period" of their lives. Engaging portraits of a spirited crew. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.