Christopher Goss est un officier en service de la Royal Air Force dont la fascination pour l'aviation militaire a commencé dans sa jeunesse. Son écriture puise profondément dans cette passion de toujours, offrant aux lecteurs une perspective unique sur le monde du vol et son élément humain. Goss explore les subtilités techniques et les expériences personnelles profondes entrelacées avec le combat et l'exploration aériens.
The Fw 200 Condor first made an appearance over Norway in April 1940. Able to
attack shipping directly, or to guide U-Boats to their prey the Condor scored
its first major success when it crippled the liner Empress of Great Britain.
Packed with photographs, this is the history of one of the unsung types to
take to the skies during World War 2.
This illustrated study charts the development and combat history of the units that saw combat with the Dornier Do 217, one of the Luftwaffe’s workhorse bombers during World War II.
Illustrated throughout with detailed artwork, this book examines the Do 17,
also known as the Flying Pencil, a common and feared sight in the European
skies, including over southern England during the Battle of Britain.
The story of the Luftwaffe's only long range maritime fighter unit - V Gruppe/Kampfgeschwader 40 (V/KG40) - and its battles against the Royal Air Force (RAF), the US Army Air Force (USAAF) and the US Navy (USN) in the skies above the Bay of Biscay. Using personal accounts from both German and Allied survivors from July 1942 onwards, Bloody Biscay relates the initial tribulations of the unit and its battles against overwhelming odds to its eventual annihilation over the Normandy beaches in June 1944. Comprehensive appendices detail the unit's commanding officers, known aircrew, all of its 109 known 'kills' matched to Allied losses and the 88 combat losses of the unit with the details of who shot those aircraft down. The twenty-six aircraft lost in accidents and further aircraft interned in Spain are also listed. Containing nearly 200 photographs, the vast majority of German origin, Bloody Biscay will give the reader a graphic insight into V/KG40's aircraft, crews and 'kills' .