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A Yankee Ace in the RAF: The World War I Letters of Captain Bogart Rogers
Contributor(s): Morrow Jr, John H. (Editor), Rogers, Earl (Editor)
ISBN: 0700621431     ISBN-13: 9780700621439
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
OUR PRICE:   $27.71  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: September 2015
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | Military - World War I
Dewey: 940.449
LCCN: 96-7191
Physical Information: 0.58" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (0.86 lbs) 280 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 1900-1919
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The engines are started, twenty shiny propellers glistening in the sun, forty exhausts rumbling and belching blue smoke. . . . Everything ready, the pilot waves his hand, the blocks are pulled and the flights taxi out one at a time. Away goes the commander, motor roaring, streamers flying, and the rest follow in their proper formation order. A couple of turns around the aerodrome and they're away to the line-up, up, and they soon disappear in the haze.

Just beyond that beckoning haze, Captain Bogart Rogers and his fellow pilots flew into enemy territory to fight the world's first air war. Suffused with the romance of flight and the harsh realities of aerial combat, Rogers's letters to his fiancee, Isabelle Young, vividly detail his wartime experiences against a lethal and elusive opponent exemplified by the likes of Baron von Richthofen's Flying Circus.

The son of controversial Los Angeles attorney Earl Rogers (the greatest jury lawyer of his time, claimed Clarence Darrow) and brother to pioneering Hearst journalist Adela Rogers St. Johns, Bogart made his mark in the Great War. Of the three hundred-plus Americans who joined the British air corps in 1917, only Rogers and two dozen other volunteers became aces by shooting down five or more German planes. He himself claimed six kills in fighting during the Second Battle of the Marne, the Somme Offensive, Cambrai, Ypres-Lys, and six other major engagements.

Rogers also had a definite flair for writing, one that launched his postwar career as a journalist and screenwriter in Hollywood. The letters in this volume are a striking testament to that skill. Lucid, reflective, highly articulate, and touched with flashes of humor, they illuminate the challenges of aviation training, daily life at the aerodromes, the liberating wonders of flight, and the sobering truths of a devastating war. They also reflect Rogers's constant longing for his future bride Izzy (who celebrates her 99th birthday in 1996).


Contributor Bio(s): Morrow Jr, John H.: - John H. Morrow, Jr., is Franklin Professor of History at the University of Georgia and the author of The Great War in the Air and German Air Power in World War I.