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Spitfires by Becky Aikman

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Spitfires

The American Women Who Flew in the Face of Danger During World War II

Becky Aikman, Laurel Lefkow, Bloomsbury Publishing

Bloomsbury · Print & ebook · May 6, 2025

Reading lane: Military Aviation

"Lively and entertaining . . .

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Into the Cockpit

A focused wartime aviation story with enough detail to satisfy the specialist and keep the pages.

Come here for

  • women pilots in wartime Britain
  • aviation detail with historical momentum

Expect

  • World War II air history
  • nonfiction with a brisk, immersive pull

Book Details

Authors
Becky Aikman, Laurel Lefkow, Bloomsbury Publishing
Publisher
Bloomsbury
Published
May 6, 2025
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Military Aviation · Aviation History
Reading lane
Military Aviation

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • World War II History

  • Military Aviation

  • Women's History

About This Book

"Lively and entertaining . . . Those fearlessly determined female pilots are the professional forebears of the women who would slowly break down barriers in the U.S. military in the decades that followed . . . And what forebears those women were." - The Washington Post “A soaring narrative.”-Keith O'Brien, New York Times bestselling author of Fly Girls The heart-pounding true story of the daring American women who piloted the most dangerous aircraft of World War II through t...

Read full description

"Lively and entertaining . . . Those fearlessly determined female pilots are the professional forebears of the women who would slowly break down barriers in the U.S. military in the decades that followed . . . And what forebears those women were." - The Washington Post “A soaring narrative.”-Keith O'Brien, New York Times bestselling author of Fly Girls 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. They were crop dusters and debutantes, college girls and performers in flying circuses-all of them trained as pilots. Because they were women, they were denied the opportunity to fly for their country when the United States entered the Second World War. But Great Britain, desperately fighting for survival, would let anyone-even Americans, even women-transport warplanes. Thus, twenty-five daring young aviators bolted for England in 1942, becoming the first American women to command military aircraft. In a faraway land, these “spitfires” lived like women decades ahead of their time. Risking their lives in one of the deadliest jobs of the war, they ferried new, barely tested fighters and bombers to air bases and returned shot-up wrecks for repair, never knowing what might go wrong until they were high in the sky. Many ferry pilots died in crashes or made spectacular saves. It was exciting, often terrifying work. The pilots broke new ground off duty as well, shocking their hosts with thoroughly modern behavior. With cinematic sweep, Becky Aikman follows the stories of nine of the women who served, drawing on unpublished diaries, letters, and records, along with her own interviews, to bring these forgotten heroines fully to life. Spitfires is a vivid, richly detailed account of war, ambition, and a group of remarkable women whose lives were as unconventional as their dreams.

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