| Mighty Eighth Air Force Museum
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Masters of the Air
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Sku#: 000507
Masters of the Air is the deeply personal story of the American bomber
boys in World War II who brought the war to Hitler's doorstep. With the
narrative power of fiction, Donald Miller takes readers on a harrowing
ride through the fire-filled skies over Berlin, Hanover, and Dresden
and describes the terrible cost of bombing for the German people.
Fighting at 25,000 feet in thin, freezing air that no warriors had
ever encountered before, bomber crews battled new kinds of assaults on
body and mind. Air combat was deadly but intermittent: periods of
inactivity and anxiety were followed by short bursts of fire and fear.
Unlike infantrymen, bomber boys slept on clean sheets, drank beer in
local pubs, and danced to the swing music of Glenn Miller's Air Force
band, which toured U.S. air bases in England. But they had a much
greater chance of dying than ground soldiers. In 1943, an American
bomber crewman stood only a one-in-five chance of surviving his tour of
duty, twenty-five missions. The Eighth Air Force lost more men in the
war than the U.S. Marine Corps.
The bomber crews were an elite group of warriors who were a
microcosm of America -- white America, anyway. (African-Americans could
not serve in the Eighth Air Force except in a support capacity.) The
actor Jimmy Stewart was a bomber boy, and so was the "King of
Hollywood," Clark Gable. And the air war was filmed by Oscar-winning
director William Wyler and covered by reporters like Andy Rooney and
Walter Cronkite, all of whom flew combat missions with the men.
The Anglo-American bombing campaign against Nazi Germany was the
longest military campaign of World War II, a war within a war. Until
Allied soldierscrossed into Germany in the final months of the war, it
was the only battle fought inside the German homeland.
Masters of the Air is a story, as well, of life in wartime England
and in the German prison camps, where tens of thousands of airmen spent
part of the war. It ends with a vivid description of the grisly hunger
marches captured airmen were forced to make near the end of the war
through the country their bombs destroyed.
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Songs That got Us Through WWII, Volume 1
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Benny Goodman - The Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert
2 Disc Set
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Senior Citizen Age 60 & Up.
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