With Wings Like Eagles: The Untold Story of the Battle of Britain
With Wings Like Eagles: The Untold Story of the Battle of Britain book cover

With Wings Like Eagles: The Untold Story of the Battle of Britain

Paperback – January 19, 2010

Price
$12.69
Format
Paperback
Pages
384
Publisher
Harper Perennial
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0061125362
Dimensions
5.31 x 0.79 x 8 inches
Weight
9.8 ounces

Description

“A wonderful story, splendidly, deftly and originally told.” — Hugh Thomas, author of The Spanish Civil Wa r “A skillful, absorbing, often moving contribution to the popular understanding of one of the few episodes in history to live on untarnished and undiminished in the collective memory and to deserve the description ‘heroic.’” — Washington Post Book World The Battle of Britain was one of the great transformative events of modern history, and Michael Korda’s stirring account of the campaign is an absolute masterpiece, written with power, intensity and tremendous fidelity to the historical record. It is a tour de force of storytelling and analysis,and a highly pleasurable read, as well, history in the grand style of the masters of the art. — Donald L. Miller, author of Masters of the Air “An excellent book. The writing is most rewarding, and Korda’s natural talent and experience as a storyteller have enabled him to bind all the disparate episodes into a gripping story. A formidable job, beautifully completed.” — Len Deighton, author of The Ipcress File Military historians face tough choices. Do they write about The Big Picture, with presidents and prime ministers making decisions with generals and admirals? Or do they write from the foxhole level, where The Big Picture extends only 300 meters to the front and flanks? . . . In looking back at World War II’s Battle of Britain in With Wings Like Eagles , historian Michael Korda tells the tale from all of the angles cited above. Not only does he make it work, he also keeps it terse. . . . With Wings Like Eagles tells their story superbly. — St. Louis Post-Dispatch “A natural pick for the WWII collection.” — Booklist “Books have been written about the Battle of Britain, but to me none is as interesting and informative as Michael Korda’s new With Wings Like Eagles ." — Tampa Tribune “The book soars in those parts in which Korda describes how the British prepared for the war in the skies, or how the Germans failed time and again to deliver a knockout blow”. — New York Times Book Review “A worthy addition to the mounds of material on the battle that saved Britain and possibly much of the world.” — San Antonio Express-News "Regardless of whether you are one of the lucky few ever to have flown a Spitfire, or your parents not yet born in 1940, Michael Korda’s reliving of all the exhilaration, heroism, fear, and epochal significance of the ‘Battle of Britain’ will enthrall you. He restores the name of its principal architect, ‘Stuffy’ Dowding, to its proper pinnacle, and even has unexpected, but just, praise for Neville Chamberlain. His mastery of aero-technics is phenomenal, and no one can make an exciting, and complex, tale more understandable; quite simply the best book I have read this year." — Sir Alistair Horne, C.B.E. In the summer of 1940, fewer than three thousand young fighter pilots of the Royal Air Force stood between Hitler and the victory that seemed almost within his grasp. In this superb history of three epic months that saved the world, Michael Korda brilliantly re-creates the intensity of combat in "the long, delirious, burning blue" of the sky above southern England—while tracing, perhaps for the first time, the entire complex web of political, diplomatic, scientific, industrial, and human decisions during the 1930s that inexorably led to the world's first, greatest, and most decisive air battle. With Wings Like Eagles brings to vivid life the extraordinary men and women on both sides of the conflict—from Winston Churchill, Neville Chamberlain, and Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring to the ground crews, the German pilots, the American volunteers, and the courageous airmen and airwomen of the RAF. Michael Korda is the author of Ulysses S. Grant , Ike , Hero , and Charmed Lives . Educated at Le Rosey in Switzerland and at Magdalen College, Oxford, he served in the Royal Air Force. He took part in the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and on its fiftieth anniversary was awarded the Order of Merit of the People's Republic of Hungary. He and his wife, Margaret, make their home in Dutchess County, New York. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “Bold and refreshing… Korda writes with great elegance and flair.”  —
  • Wall Street Journal
  • Michael Korda’s brilliant work of history takes the reader back to the summer of 1940, when fewer than three thousand young fighter pilots of the Royal Air Force—often no more than nine hundred on any given day—stood between Hitler and the victory that seemed almost within his grasp.
  • Korda recreates the intensity of combat in the “long, delirious, burning blue” of the sky above southern England and, perhaps, for the first time, traces the entire complex web of political, diplomatic, scientific, industrial, and human decisions that led inexorably to the world’s first, greatest, and most decisive air battle.
  • Winston Churchill memorable said about the Battle of Britain, “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.” Here is the story of “the few,” and how they prevailed against the odds, deprived Hitler of victory, and saved the world during three epic months in 1940.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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★★
7%
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23%
(302)

Most Helpful Reviews

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More history than epic

Michael Korda has written a very comprehensive narration about the Battle of Britain, from the prelude, during the period of active battle (July - October 1940) until the aftermath.
Korda explains in thorough detail the roles and impact of key figures from both sides of the conflict, Hittler, Goring, Galland, Camm, Churchill, Dowding , Bader etc etc etc.
But Korda did not give much space to the heroics of individual pilots, except for just a very few examples.
If you are expecting to read about heroic dogfights between pilots from both sides, you will be disapointed. But if you want to know about the historical aspects of this Battle of Britain / England's Finest Hour, the whys, hows, whos and outcomes of this particular period of World War II, then this book will provide much detailed facts.
4 people found this helpful
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"With Wings Like Eagles" Soars!

Michael Korda's historical analysis of the Battle of Britain is a superbly researched, well argued and charismatically written account of one of history's most important battles.

Korda is a former RAF pilot from the 1950s and he refreshingly abandons dry objectivity by using the pronouns "our" and "us" when referring to Battle of Britain England and the RAF.

Korda provides a big picture strategic overview, convincingly demonstrating that "appeaser" Prime Ministers Stanley Baldwin and Neville Chamberlain in fact laid the technical foundations that enabled the RAF to triumph over the Luftwaffe. Rejecting the orthodoxy that decreed the bomber must be the main focus of the RAF, these PMs endorsed building a large and modern fighter force.

Hugh Dowding, the Chief of Fighter Command during the Battle of Britain fought the bureaucracy to
1) obtain modern monoplane fighters such as the Spitfire and Hurricane,
2) arm them with 8 .303 guns each,
3) install armored windscreens,
4) sink communication telephone lines inside concrete sheathed underground tubes
5) create a radically modern command center, staffed by women flight controllers and using huge topographical maps with real time depictions of German and RAF fighter and bomber streams and squadron readiness updates.
6) install radar arrays on the coast to map German air formations and provide early warning to the RAF.

Korda reveals that Dowding resisted committing the RAF to mass battles and instead chose a form of "aerial guerilla warfare" (my phrase) whereby the RAF would send up small squadrons to pinprick the Luftwaffe bomber streams and attrit them over time.

Along with discussions of grand strategy, Korda furnishes worm's eye details such as the red tape affixed over Hurricane and Spitfire gun barrels to prevent entry of moisture that would freeze at altitude. Korda also examines the politics of the Battle, including Churchill's foolish desire to send an extra 10 Hurricane squadrons to France. Dowding successfully resisted this deployment which would have fatally reduced the RAF's minimum force level for protecting Britain.

This is a fantastic work: educational, inspiring and persuasive. I hope Mr. Korda tackles the SOE next!
3 people found this helpful
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Another Perspective on the Battle of Britain

The cover of the book says "The untold story of the Battle of Britain" and this gem of a book proves to be the case. Having read a number of previous works on the campaign, I wasn't sure what new revelations Mr Korda would provide. His book is a wealth of information on the pereceptive actions of much maligned politicians before the war, of the bitter 'in fighting' between senior air force officers (on both sides) and a thoughtful assessment of the British strategy to delay the German invasion in 1940. The book is a terrific testament to two of the lesser known heroes of the battle; Keith Park and Hugh Dowding and both are given the praise that was denied them for so long. However, they are also shown to have their own faults and this book offers valuable insights on the issues that affected certain decisions. There are some great descriptive passages and the footnotes (which sometimes serve to distract) provide snippets of detail that reflect the depth of research.

Overall a cracking read and a fitting testament not only to 'the few' but to all of those who played their part in this part of history. The reference to the WAAFs, groundcrew, engineers and tradesmen who made the aircraft, and the stoic public that endured the ever mounting casualties remind us of the sacrifice made by so many.
2 people found this helpful
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WITH WINGS LIKE EAGLES

In my opinion one of the best books on the Battle of Britain.Wellresearched
and well written
2 people found this helpful
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Eagles and crows: A story of brilliant strategic vision and crass organizational politics

Michael Korda's With Wings Like Eagles provides a detailed, objective, vivid and informative account of the Battle of Britain. It is, however, much more than a retelling of the lead-up and a day-by-day account of the thirty-plus days of the Goring’s efforts to degrade the RAF to the point where a Nazi invasion was feasible. Korda has written a cautionary tale of how clashing personalities and visions at the top of any organization can undermine its effectiveness and how organizational politics can distort history that discredits many of those involved. Korda does a good job turning Hugh Dowding, the principle architect of Britain victory in the Battle of Britain, into a tragic Othello-type character. Dowding was interpersonally flawed, imperious, politically inept, yet strategically and tactically supremely competent. His vision of a centrally controlled, breathtakingly efficient and resilient fighter command that leveraged to the utmost his technical and geographic advantages and carefully preserved his difficult to replace fighter pilots was essential to the immediate victory. At the same time, Dowding’s personality and single-mindedness meant that he had too few political friends and organizational resources to fight-back when jealous, disgruntled and ambitious colleagues seized on his failure to ensure adequate night-fighting capabilities. Dowding’s treatment by Churchill and the Air Ministry appear egregiously unfair. In retrospect, Dowding was as critical to the victory as radar, the Spitfires, the Hurricanes, the gallant few and the thousands of ground crew, radar operators, air controllers who supported them. It is astonishing to learn that in true Orwellian fashion Hugh Dowding’s name did not appear in the official History of the Battle of Britain!
1 people found this helpful
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His critics felt that the resources given to air defense were useless, and detrimental to building the only effective deterrent

Korda contributes much information that is not usually presented in the history of the Battle of Britain. The generally accepted view among the press and aviators going into WW2 was that the bomber would always get through, and large cities could be erased from the map. Therefore, most military experts believed that the only defense was the creation of a large bomber force so as to be able to threaten retaliation. Korda makes the case that two British rime ministers, Baldwin and Chamberlain, were so repelled by the concept of killing civilians that they backed the development and deployment of radar, and building the RAF's Fighter Command into an effective force for air defense.
The astounding thesis in Korda's book is that the man in charge of Fighter Command, Air Chief Marshall Dowding, was a visionary who brought together not merely planes and pilots, but also the communications and information processing needed to direct his planes based on radar and human observations along with the strategy needed to hold the Luftwaffe at bay - and this despite heated opposition from within the RAF, and even within Fighter Command. His critics felt that the resources given to air defense were useless, and detrimental to building the only effective deterrent: a massive bomber force.
The bomber people, in the event, did not have the technology to place their bombs accurately in WW2; so without Dowding's work Britain would have lost control of the air over her beaches and could not have prevented invasion by the Wehrmacht.
However, Dowding was hindered to a considerable extent by his critics, by lack of resources, and did not succeed in building an effective defense against nighttime bombers. This, along with relentless criticism, led to his forced retirement shortly after it became clear that the Germans could not gain the air superiority required for an invasion.
The astounding thing presented by Korda is that in the face of German superiority in many respects, what Dowding provided was absolutely essential to the survival of Britain, and no other RAF officer can be named who was inclined to do anything like what Dowding did.
1 people found this helpful
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Geat history of the battle!

The author uses multiple first person sources and takes great effort to show another side of this great battle. Korda takes the battle off the headlines and into the lives of the extrodinary men and women who bravely fought to protect their homeland. Nice easy read with enough detail from original sources to satisfy even the most serious of history buffs!
1 people found this helpful
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A good popular accounting

This is a good, competent retelling of the salient events of the Battle, particularly from the British side. A Duel Of Eagles by Peter Townsend remains the best book on the subject from both the British and the German sides, especially from the flyers' perspectives.
1 people found this helpful
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World War II's most amazing battle

The best book about the Battle of Britain and the months and years that led to it. Michael Korda is a wonderful storyteller and historian
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Background on the construction of the key aircraft on both sides in this battle

Well- researched, authentic.
Lacks dynamism and enthusiasm for my taste.