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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating, authoritative tales of aerial hauntings
This is a book that should appeal greatly to those interested in the paranormal as well as those captivated by aviation. The author writes in an engaging, personalized manner, and he bends over backward to defend the stories he relates as well as the integrity of his contributors. He does not try to explain the unexplainable; he merely presents each tale the way it...
Published on June 30, 2002 by Daniel Jolley

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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars If ever an author needed a Ghost Writer...
This book is, frankly, a great big mess. Flying afficianado he may be, but a non-fiction writer Martin Caidin is not. The stories in this book seem to be arranged in no specific order or sequence - it jumps around from one topic to another with very little holding them together. Likewise, there is really only enough material to fill perhaps 100 pages, but enough waffle...
Published on November 29, 2007 by Andy Gill


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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating, authoritative tales of aerial hauntings, June 30, 2002
This review is from: Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings (Paperback)
This is a book that should appeal greatly to those interested in the paranormal as well as those captivated by aviation. The author writes in an engaging, personalized manner, and he bends over backward to defend the stories he relates as well as the integrity of his contributors. He does not try to explain the unexplainable; he merely presents each tale the way it happened, often using the very words of the person involved. Throughout, the author's great love for flying and for the men and women involved in aviation is openly apparent. Caidin's qualifications as a pilot and aviation expert are almost unequalled; he has flown countless aircraft of all sorts in his life, he has written well over a hundred books on aviation, and he is well known in aviation circles. The fact that he himself cites a number of personal examples of impossible things that happened to him while in flight lends great authority to his role as compiler of the truths of others.

Some of the stories are truly fascinating: a plane disappears for ten minutes on approach to Miami and everyone on board "loses" ten minutes; military aircraft fly hundreds of miles back to base and actually land with a dead pilot or no crew whatsoever; three flight crews return to base and are debriefed from a mission in which, it is soon discovered, all planes and crew were lost; pilots encounter planes from an entirely different era which then disappear; ghostly apparitions and sounds are encountered on military bases and airfields, etc. Every tale is fascinating; more importantly, each tale is verifed to the extent possible. Caidin tells us that the vast majority of the stories he collected were rejected; only the stories he could research intensively and authoritatively prove as having happened in the ways they were described to him made the final cut. He stands by these unexplainable stories and the brave men and women who had the courage to reveal truths many had never revealed before to another soul. As the author often points out, the events and experiences detailed here could not possibly have happened, yet they did happen.

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16 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Twilight Zone In the Sky, February 9, 2004
By 
William R. Hancock (Travelers Rest, S.C. United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings (Paperback)
It was on a beautiful, balmy Sunday morning in the late spring of '93 when the telephone call came. I was puttering around the house in cut-offs, a t-shirt, and sneakers, swigging Pepsi Cola and listening to the humm of honeybees in the yard and
early Beatles on the golden-oldies radio station. At around elevenish the ringing began and I picked up the receiver hoping fervently that I wasn't going to be verbally assaulted by some chattering telemarketer.
I wasn't. Instead this big, gregarious basso voice came booming over the wire at me. " Hi," it said. "I'd like to speak to Bill Hancock if I might."
"You got him," says I.
"Bill, Martin Caidin here." (Oh, yeah, sure, I think. Some smart aleck is having me on). "Listen, I'm calling to let you know this case you put me onto for the new book is dynamite. Even stranger than you thought it was when you wrote me." (Huh?
Wait a minute. This IS Martin Caidin!!! Holy Frijoles, Batman!!).
And from that point on we were rolling. I never met the man face to face. Only knew him from his books and his reputation as a historian, aviator, and writer (You remember Steve Austin, the "Six Million Dollar Man"? Caidin invented him. Remember an old movie called "Marooned" that did an eerily uncanny job of predicting the trials of Apollo 13, years before that flight was ever made? Caidin again). At the conclusion of "Ghosts of the Air" he made a request for submissions of material for a possible sequel and yours truly sent him a letter regarding a peculiar incident I recalled. He wrote back, I answered, and a fax or two was sent. Now came this call out of the blue and it turns out he was really jacked up over this little incident and was letting me KNOW he was. And thanking me profusely for putting him onto it. My impressions that day were of a man with a mind like a steel trap. A razor sharp intellect and a tremendous enthusiasm for life. This guy was just plain larger than life and it came through loud and clear on the phone.
He was doing the preliminary work on the "Ghosts of the Air" sequel and was excited about it. said it was going to be better than the first one. That got ME excited because I flat out LOVE "Ghosts of the Air" (So why only give it 4 stars?, you ask.
I will explain shortly). Caidin already had the title: "Phantoms On the Flight Deck"...and he loved it. I thought it was neat, too.(Don't bother to look for "Phantoms On the Flight Deck", though, at Amazon, or anywhere else...Marty never finished it. He died before "final assembly" took place).
But "Ghosts of the Air" IS here and it is wonderful. It is chock full of thrills and chills and supernatural events and stranger than strange happenings in the air. The "Out There" events of Caidin's bizarre trip through a milky fog in the Bermuda Triangle on a Catalina PBY flying boat...with all directional and electronics gear gone on the "fritz"...the cases of shot up warplanes bringing home their dead pilots...all these and much, much more. All of this stuff investigated and checked and rechecked for accuracy before it went to the publishers.
Well...ALMOST all of it. And that is the reason for only 4 stars instead of 5. There is one "ringer" in the bunch. I caught it later, along with some others, when it made its way into Fate magazine with a bit more "tweaking" than Marty allowed it. And he caught it, too. And realized he'd been "snookered" with it.Really ticked him off. He'd seen it in the form of a supposed article someone was doing (the Fate writer I assume). Looked like it had a good pedigree. Guy told Marty he could use the "general outline" of the story but couldn't go into specifics with it because this guy had the "rights" to all the particulars of the thing .So That's what Marty did; he went with it in a very general and non-detailed way. It's in "Ghosts". All the stories in the book are true and accurate except this one. It is a crock job built around a fictional "One Step Beyond" type short story from the early sixties. You'll know it. It is the only incident in the book that is vague and lacking in detail. Everywhere else Caidin gives dates, locales, names, aircraft types, the "whole nine yards". This chapter, though ,is dreamy and detail-less.It says a young fellow is up joyriding in the clouds one day and all of a sudden he is in a near disastrous mid-air with some biplane that looks like something out of the 1920s or even World War One. The contact is so close there is even a paint scraping. Then the biplane is lost in the clouds and the young fellow has to do an emergency landing. No trace of the bipe is ever discovered, though, until some time later some kids find an old, old biplane stored in a barn. Looks like its been there "forever".
Has an old flight log in it that records a near-fatal mishap with a strange looking aircraft with only one set of wings...decades and decades ago. And it has a paint scrape on it.
This is the "ringer". this is the one story in "Ghosts of the Air" that is pure B.S. Marty discovered it after the fact and was most distressed by it. That's why he was taking extra time and extra effort with the sequel. It was not his plan for "Phantoms" to have ANY "ringers" in IT.
So there is the reason for the 4 stars. Apart from that ONE bogus event, everything else in here went down just the way he SAYS it did. So read the B.S. chapter and know it for what it is. Then read all the REST of these accounts and go ahead and let your hair stand on end. The others all MORE than make up ANY deficit that one single little klunker establishes.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely unique, March 30, 1998
By 
gwennan@gator.net (Gainesville, Florida) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings (Paperback)
One of the best books available on any kind of haunting...primarily because it is _thoroughly_ documented. Mr Caidin bases his stories on eyewitness accounts and official military records (none of those "I knew a guy whose second cousin knew the guy this happened to....")His 'take' on the Bermuda Triangle is particularly interesting. I had the honor to be acquainted with Mr Caidin; he was intelligent, opinionated, and as skeptical as anyone I've ever met. The fact that _he_ wrote this book makes the stories within all the more convincing!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Possibly the most extraordinary book you will ever read !, September 13, 2008
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This review is from: Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings (Paperback)
I first read this book and discovered Martin Caidin many years ago. It is about unexplained events that happened on US military aircraft during WW2. Every event in this book is completely researched and verified with some of the participants. You literally will not be able to put this book down until you finish it. How's this for starters:one day a shot up B17 bomber arrived back at base and made a normal landing. When officers inspected the crew inside, it was discovered they had all been dead for hours.
Martin Caidin before his passing logged thousands of hours in all types of WW2 aircraft. I had lost this book years ago and bought another one from Amazon. In re-reading these stories I feel just as many chills up my spine now as I did years ago.
This is a one-of-a-kind read for pilots and non-pilots alike. This is one book you will NEVER forget.
Mr. Caidin wrote many fine books. He was a pilot's pilot and and one heck of an author.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great read!, October 27, 2006
By 
joe-maryland (Stevensville, MD United States) - See all my reviews
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If you like airplanes and/or "X Files" type stories, you will love this book. I don't even care if he made it all up, this book is great. Now Mr. Caidin is presumeably a ghost himself, maybe he will give some wayward pilot something to write about :)
I could think of worse people to haunt my airplane.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book to read late at night..., March 28, 2004
By 
"natl77" (Tucson, Arizona United States) - See all my reviews
Excellent book dealing with aerial hauntings, phantom aircraft, and unusual sightings made by pilots. Very entertaining (the one "ringer" story reported in the previous review notwithstanding). Very disappointed to hear the follow up was never completed. If you enjoy true stories of unusual events, with a emphasis on aircraft and the pilots who flew them, this is the book for you.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating...Haunting..., August 13, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings (Paperback)
One of the best books I have ever read. The X-Files will have a run for their money if ever a series was made about this book... The "other side of the story", the "mysteries" and the hauntings that were experienced by the men in their flying machines as told by one of the greatest writers of aviation. The accounts of the pilots will make you wonder...."Is it possible??? Is it true???? Read the book and judge for yourself....
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars thin line between SUPERNATURAL & REALITY, November 27, 2010
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This review is from: Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings (Paperback)
He opens a subject that most will not touch... No logical answers, so avoid it & skip being branded a whacko.
But the fact remains... there IS time travel! What more authorative source than the Holy Bible?.. When Jesus told the Jews: " Before Abraham was... I AM"..they wanted to stone him..which is what the skeptics would do today.
Think about it... What does His ( God's) OMNIPOTENCE mean?.. if not He is everywhere at once.. the dimension of TIME is no obstacle to Him...
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent source for campfire stories., April 24, 2009
By 
PK (Vermont USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings (Paperback)
I mean that in the best way. These stories, anecdotes, mysteries, whatever you want to call them are fun and entertaining. Caidin does s good job of relating these strange events but never gets preachy or tries to imprint his point of view on them. "Here they are": he seems to say, "make of them what you will."
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars ghosts of the air, August 23, 2008
This review is from: Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings (Paperback)
This is an interesting book about ghosts and other inexplicable experiences in flight. Some of the stories are pretty bizarre; others follow the standard lines of ghost sightings. Most of the stories are out of World War II. What I found most intriguing was a story out of Spence Field, Moltrie, Georgia - my father was stationed at Spence Field during World War II. I wonder, were my father still alive, if he would remember the incident!
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Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings
Ghosts of the Air: True Stories of Aerial Hauntings by Martin Caidin (Paperback - November 1, 1994)
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