Remains: A Story of the Flying Tigers, Who Won Immortality Defending Burma and China from Japanese Invasion

Remains: A Story of the Flying Tigers, Who Won Immortality Defending Burma and China from Japanese Invasion

by Daniel Ford
Remains: A Story of the Flying Tigers, Who Won Immortality Defending Burma and China from Japanese Invasion

Remains: A Story of the Flying Tigers, Who Won Immortality Defending Burma and China from Japanese Invasion

by Daniel Ford

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Overview

When young Eddie Gillespie discovers a World War II airplane in the jungle, with a grinning skeleton at the controls, he sets a story in motion. Two American fighter pilots in the Chinese Air Force, with their English and Burmese girlfriends, and a Japanese suicide pilot whose name happens to mean "tree of the sun"--they clash at Rangoon, while the British empire falls about their ears. Here is a story of the Flying Tigers, immortalized by their exploits in Southeast Asia in the opening months of the Pacific War, as told by a man uniquely qualified to write about those stirring times.


Ford's history of the Flying Tigers won the award of excellence from the Aviation-Space Writers Association, while his novel of the Vietnam war inspired the Burt Lancaster film Go Tell the Spartans, which the Cincinnati Enquirer called "one of the noblest films, ever, about men in crisis." Here he deftly melds fact and fiction in an unforgettable wartime romance. "You can't beat remains, kid," Lieutenant Atherton says in a beautifully limned conclusion. "They'll tell the story every time."


Product Details

BN ID: 2940046287301
Publisher: Warbird Books
Publication date: 10/16/2014
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 450 KB

About the Author

Daniel Ford has spent a lifetime reading and writing about the wars of the past hundred years, from the Irish rebellion of 1916 to the counter-guerrilla operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. He is best known for his history of the American Volunteer Group--the 'Flying Tigers' of the Second World War--and his Vietnam novel that was filmed as Go Tell the Spartans, starring Burt Lancaster. Most recently, he has turned to the invasion of Poland in 1939 by Germany and Soviet Russia. Most of his books and many shorter pieces are available in digital editions He lives and works in New Hampshire.

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