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An Airman's Odyssey

Walt Braznell and the Pilots
He Led into the Jet Age

William Braznell

ISBN 0-8262-1306-5
248 pages
 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Bibliography, Index, 105 Illustrations
Tables, Maps, 2001
$39.95t

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An Airman's Odyssey
is the fascinating saga of the airline industry's early years and of the pioneer airmen who tamed America's last great wilderness—the sky. It is both a sweeping adventure story and an absorbing history of the evolution of flight and flight management, as witnessed by one of the industry's pioneer aviators, Walt Braznell.

An Airman's Odyssey describes the airlines' origins and early development, dwelling at length upon that crucial and immensely colorful period between the awarding of the first air mail contracts in 1925 and the infamous "Airline Spoils Scandals" of 1934. The book goes on to chronicle the advent of the first great passenger liner, the DC-3; the tremendous advances in aviation technology and the boom in air travel during and immediately following World War II; and the reasons U.S. aircraft manufacturers and airlines lagged so far behind the British and the French in ushering in the Jet Age.

Side by side with this fast-paced historical narrative, An Airman's Odyssey relates the story of a fledgling air mail pilot's education in aerial survival and his subsequent progress up the ranks to chief pilot and ultimately to vice president and director of American Airlines' six-thousand-man flight department. Along the way, the reader is introduced to a cast that includes a young (and surprisingly rambunctious) Charles A. Lindbergh; Missouri Air National Guard's beloved commander Phil Love; St. Louis's Robertson brothers; aviation novelist Ernie Gann; National Air Races champion Benny Howard; and dozens of other legendary figures of American aviation.

A mixture of fact and legend, humor and tragedy, history and memoir—"with a set of operating instructions thrown in for good measure"—An Airman's Odyssey includes dozens of photographs of these airmen and the aircraft they flew, as well as illustrations and discourses on subjects ranging from aerial maneuvers (aerobatics) to the anatomy of a thunderstorm.

An Airman's Odyssey should appeal to not only airmen and aviation enthusiasts but also any airline passenger who has ever given a passing thought to the human endeavor and personal sacrifice that, in scarcely more than a generation, transformed air travel from the most dangerous to the safest mode of mass transportation in the world.

About the Author

William Braznell, the son of Walt Braznell, is a former Air Force pilot with more than two thousand hours of single- and multi-engine flying time to his credit. He and his wife, Judy, reside in Larkspur, California.


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