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Tales of Lancasters and Other Aircraft: Dangerous Skies in the Second World War

Posted By: hill0
Tales of Lancasters and Other Aircraft: Dangerous Skies in the Second World War

Tales of Lancasters and Other Aircraft: Dangerous Skies in the Second World War by George Culling
English | 6 July 2017 | ASIN: B0722RBFR1 | 177 Pages | AZW3 | 1.76 MB

Of every 100 operational airmen in World War Two, 9 were killed flying in England and 3 severely injured in crashes, so non-operational casualties were significant in numbers, over 15,000. Operational casualties were of course chillingly grim – over 56,000 airmen died in the Second World War, over half those involved. George Culling was a nineteen-year-old Lancaster navigator whose own experiences often involved battling tricky and dangerous conditions. Fascinated by the ever-present dangers for airmen even well away from combat, he has collated tales from comrades and combined them with his own to preserve some of the unexpected, inconvenient, dangerous, and often downright bizarre experiences that frequently typified daily life for airmen in the Second World War.