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De Vlieg-epos

Deze serie duikt in de boeiende geschiedenis van de luchtvaart, en volgt de reis van de mensheid van de eerste gedurfde pogingen tot de wonderen van de moderne vlucht. Elk deel onthult spannende verhalen over pioniers, technologische doorbraken en cruciale momenten die onze verovering van de lucht hebben gevormd. Het is een meeslepende verkenning vol moed, vindingrijkheid en de eeuwige menselijke droom om te zweven.

The Road to Kitty Hawk
The First Aviators
Barnstormers & Speed Kings
Designers and Test Pilots
The Soviet Air Force at War
The RAF at War

Aanbevolen leesvolgorde

  • The editors of Time-Life Books have produced another exciting The Epic of Flight. The Soviet Air Force is brought to you in exciting detail through vivid photography and engaging, informative text.

    The Soviet Air Force at War
  • The First Aviators

    • 176bladzijden
    • 7 uur lezen
    3,8(18)Tarief

    This book in "The Epic of Flight" series published by Time-Life Books highlights those intrepid early aviators who were at the leading edge of this burgeoning new technology, that of manned flight.

    The First Aviators
  • "This is a book of dreams and dreamers; it is chock full of failures, because until December 17, 1903, all of the many attempts to achieve powered flight were failures. But don't let that put you off, for the story has a happy ending, one as dramatic as any epic tale in the literature of fact or fiction. You can almost hear the fellow who had been watching the Wright brothers on the dunes that day in 1903 come bursting into the little post office at Kitty Hawk shouting, "They have done it! Damned it they ain't flew."" Thomas H. Flaherty, Jr., Series Editor, The Epic of Flight

    The Road to Kitty Hawk
  • The Luftwaffe

    • 176bladzijden
    • 7 uur lezen
    4,0(46)Tarief

    Traces the history of the German air force during World War II, focusing on flying aces, models of fighters and bombers, and major air battles

    The Luftwaffe
  • When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the Army Air Forces had only 1,100 combat-ready planes. No one could have imagined then that within the next four years the AAF would become the mighty weapon commemorated in the paintings reproduced on the following pages, or that it would have to scope to engage in what its commander, General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, described as a "global mission." Nevertheless, by 1944 the AAF had grown into 16 separate air forces stationed around the world, and its 1,100 planes had grown to nearly 80,000.

    America in the Air War
  • In this book from "The Epic of Flight" Time-Life series, WWI provides the stage for a new type of warrior; one that fights in the air. The book informs readers how aviation underwent a rapid transformation as the opposing forces introduced daring men in their flying machines into the battle.

    Knights of the air