Fighting the Flying Circus
Eddie Rickenbacker
Lu par Brett W. Downey
This is the WWI memoirs of Medal of Honor winner, Capt Eddie Rickenbacker. He fought in and eventually became commander of the 94th "Hat-in-the-Ring" Squadron, which ended the war with the highest number of air victories of any American squadron. The circus mentioned in the title refers to the German squadron commanded by the famous Red Baron, Manfred von Richthofen. (Introduction by Brett W. Downey) (10 hr 6 min)
Chapitres
| 01 - INTRODUCING ARCHY | 15:14 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 02 - THE AERODROME | 17:21 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 03 - OUR FIRST SORTIES | 24:28 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 04 - DOWNING MY FIRST HUN | 12:25 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 05 - JIMMY MEISSNER STRIPS HIS WINGS | 17:12 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 06 - JIMMY HALL'S LAST FIGHT | 15:59 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 07 - NEW RESPONSIBILITIES | 13:38 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 08 - A VICTORY AND A NARROW ESCAPE | 15:08 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 09 - DOWN IN FLAMES | 15:32 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 10 - LUFBERY IS KILLED | 16:04 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 11 - SQUADRON FESTIVITIES | 17:33 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 12 - JIMMY MEISSNER AGAIN | 15:11 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 13 - AMERICA'S FIRST ACE | 15:05 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 14 - RUMPLER NUMBER l6 | 16:40 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 15 - CAMPBELL'S LAST FIGHT | 17:10 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 16 - BECOMING AN ACE | 16:50 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 17 - A PERPLEXING BANK OF FOG | 14:27 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 18 - STRAFING THE DRACHEN | 17:05 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 19 - THE CHATEAU-THIERRY SALIENT | 17:17 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 20 - THE DEATH OF QUENTIN ROOSEVELT | 19:08 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 21 - THE FLYING CIRCUS SCORES HEAVILY | 14:51 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 22 - OUR SPADS ARRIVE | 17:18 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 23 - BACK CLOSE TO VERDUN | 16:34 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 24 - THE ST. MIHIEL DRIVE | 19:26 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 25 - AMERICAN ACE OF ACES | 17:24 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 26 - CAPTAIN OF THE HAT-IN-THE-RING SQUADRON | 16:32 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 27 - AN EVENTFUL D DAY | 17:56 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 28 - FRANK LUKE STRAFES HIS LAST BALLOON | 16:14 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 29 - A NIGHT-MISSION | 17:29 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 30 - A DAY'S WORK SIX VICTORIES | 18:06 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 31 - SEEING THE WAR | 18:00 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 32 - A REGULAR DOG-FIGHT | 18:31 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 33 - AN AEROPLANE MOVIE SHOW | 18:46 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 34 - AN OVER-ZEALOUS ALLY | 16:17 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 35 - THE END DRAWS NEAR | 17:08 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
| 36 - LAST VICTORY OF THE GREAT WAR | 16:34 | Lu par Brett W. Downey |
Critiques
amazing reader & captivating story
jaded_grl
first off, an amazing reader! loud peppy voice sounds like you are listening to a "newsreel" announcer from the 20s. i love the little bit at the end of the book where the reader says "also from the great state of ohio", very cute. this book will bring you to a realization of just how fast airplane design changed in the few years of the war. the constant death of war is present, but this writer dix uncle sam a favor in making death sound great & honorable instead of terrible. i appreciate the few occurrences where the pilots arranged to escort a prisoner back instead of shooting down helplessly injured planes. a must read book. fast pace, each chapter is its own story - so if you zone out during a chapter you dont have a "plot line" to miss. make sure you read a war story from the trenches to compare with this one - same war vastly different stories.
Amazing Story, Most Excellent Reader
mnels
It is appalling how much history is not taught in school nor depicted on screen in documentaries with truth and honestly. This is an absolutely amazing story and should be shared with any boy or young man aspiring to be the best he came be. Brett W. Downy read this as if he were Eddie Rickenbacker and had lived every one of the events that happened.
Fighting the flying circus...
TheBookworm
... is an exciting and important story of an era that will soon be beyond living memory. I'll admit it: in my early 21st century arrogance, I was expecting to endure a full measure of jingoism and bravado along with the story of this "ace of aces". But there's little of that. Eddie Rickenbacker was 28 at the end of WWI and was the old man of his squadron. Nevertheless his writing shows great maturity and empathy with the enemy -- as well as the kind of callousness that combatants must develop to survive war. With little training and no parachutes or navigation equipment beyond a compass, these pioneering aviators endured terrible losses. Many thanks for reading this important piece. TheBookworm (Manchester, UK)
Wonderful book. All I needed to know about flight in WW1
D
Well written journal of an American WW1 fighter pilot. Have right me many interesting facts about that war. Book has given me vivid picture of a pilot, many things I'm sure have not changed since then. Book well worth my time and recommend to any war enthusiast.
Great recollection, well read
Dennis Berry
This is an excellent recollection by Rickenbacker of hi time on the front lines in France during WW I. Downey is a wonderful reader. I felt as though I were listening to Rickenbacker himself. If you enjoy aviation and military history, this is definitely a book worth listening to...
EXCELLENT
GonzoRanch
Goofy title, but this is REALLY interesting, w/ an engaging & compelling writing style. It's very long, but NEVER gets boring or slow. The reader - it felt like he / she really was the author. Kudos Dude / Dudettes.
Great story!
Seven Archers
A rare glimpse into what it was like to be the first, and best, warriors of the air when flying was still in it's infancy by one of the greatest aviators this nation every produced.
Interesting memoir
Timothy Ferguson
This is a memoir of the commander of the “Hat in the Ring” Squadron, the most successful American squadron in the First World War. The author had a fortunate war, and his text reads a little like propaganda. He does occasionally say things critical of himself, and he broods a little on how callous he has become concerning the deaths of his friends, but generally it’s all a steady march toward victory, success and honor. This makes it less interesting that a similar book I listened to just afterward, called "High Adventure" by Hall.