Amazon.com: Rider in the Sky: How an American Cowboy Built England's First Airplane (9780375811067): John R. Hulls, David Weitzman: Books

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Rider in the Sky: How an American Cowboy Built England's First Airplane [Hardcover]

John R. Hulls (Author), David Weitzman (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 8, 2003 10 and up5 and up
Samuel Cody grew up on the western frontier, a true American cowboy. With nerves of steel and dauntless courage, he would be one of the first to cross another frontier: the frontier of flight.
As a young boy Samuel Cody was fascinated with kites. Living in England years later, Cody created the first kites strong and big enough to carry a man high into the air. Like the Wrights and other early aviators, Cody was determined to build an airplane. He faced not only the technological hurdles of his day, but the apathy of the British military. Against these obstacles, Cody used his ingenuity, his skill, and a great deal of daring to create England’s first airplane in 1908. His is an inspirational story of American willpower and determination.

Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 6-9-This lively, engaging, but ultimately flawed biography tells the story of Samuel Cody. Born in 1867 in Texas, Cody was a flamboyant showman. His "Wild West" show, the Klondyke Nugget, was a huge success both in America and in England. While in England, Cody pursued a lifelong passion for kite building, eventually becoming the first person in history to create a controllable man-lifting kite. He built and flew the airship Nulli Secundus in 1907, and made the first airplane flight in England in 1908. In 1909, he made a world-record cross-country flight with the first passengers in England. Hull chronicles his subject's progress with that of two fellow Americans, Orville and Wilbur Wright. His accomplishments are impressive, as he was largely self-taught, and are a testament to willpower, determination, and imagination. The book is full of archival black-and-white photographs. The author states that he did most of his research over the Internet, and was able to access many primary sources and talk to many people and visit museums and libraries. One wonders why he did not cite these resources in the text. He also states that all the dialogue between Cody and Colonel Capper (a British Army officer, skilled engineer, and lifelong supporter) was "a figment of my imagination." None of the photos are credited. Unfortunately, the engaging writing style and interesting subject matter is overshadowed by a lack of proper documentation.
Jennifer Ralston, Harford County Public Library, Belcamp, MD
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Gr. 7-9. Samuel Cody, not to be confused with William (Buffalo Bill) Cody, was a showman cowboy who settled in England with his family, starting a Wild West show and a long-running melodrama called The Klondyke Nugget. His avocation of kite-construction grew into something more as Cody built and flew a series of increasingly sophisticated experimental aircraft. In 1908, the year the Wright brothers demonstrated their flyer in France, he achieved the first English airplane flight. Illustrated in black and white with many period photos as well as drawings, design plans, and posters, the book offers an unusual perspective on the development of the airplane. Cody comes across as a determined but somewhat distant figure, seen within the wider context of bureaucratic resistance to new technology as well as the practical difficulties of achieving his goals. For larger collections. Carolyn Phelan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 10 and up
  • Hardcover: 112 pages
  • Publisher: Crown Books for Young Readers; First edition. edition (April 8, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375811060
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375811067
  • Product Dimensions: 10.3 x 7.8 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,486,567 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hulls Makes History Fun, May 8, 2003
By 
Sage Van Wing (Inverness, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rider in the Sky: How an American Cowboy Built England's First Airplane (Hardcover)
When I was very small, I was terrified every time I got onto an airplane: how could something so large possibly lift off the ground? Like most of the rest of us, though, I have gradually lost that fear- I simply look forward to the peanuts and trust in the engineeers, who are capable of designing things I could never possibly understand.
Reading John Hulls' book recaptured for me a sense of that wonder in the awesome feat of flying. Cody and the Wright brothers became more than just clever engineers, they were ingenious and daring pioneers who put their own lives on the line, rising hundreds of feet in the air supported by nothing more than bamboo and canvas. Cody's madcap adventures (cow hand, gold miner, variety show creator, Royal Aeronotical Society member, etc..) would make a wild story in any age, but are particularly resonant on the brink of the centennial of flight.
Hulls' book, though aimed at children, is informative and interesting for anyone fascinated by flying and the art of invention. Here is a simple story well told: the writing is clear and evocative, the characters come alive on the page, and once again history is a story worth telling.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars As important as The Wrights, April 19, 2003
By 
John Joss (Los Altos, CA USA) - See all my reviews
Herding cattle up the Chisholm Trail from Texas to the Kansas railheads for shipment, young Samuel Cody became fascinated with the kites built by the chuck wagon's Chinese cook. The cook taught Cody kite building, starting the young cowhand on an odyssey that would take him to the Klondyke gold rush, then to the London stage with his KLONDYKE NUGGET, to full fellowship in the Royal Aeronatical Society and simultaneous birthing of the British aircraft industry.
The show's success, with roles for all his family, enabled Cody to indulge his kite habit on a grand scale, shown in the book's many fine photos. In 1901 they built the first practical man-carrying kite (woman-carrying, too--Lela shown in a photo aloft in formal hat and long dress, the first woman to fly in a heavier-than-air craft). The Royal Navy and then the Army bought Cody's kites, leading Cody to friendship with Colonel Capper, a British army officer ostensibly developing balloons for artillery observation but actually harboring visions of flight.
Cody and Capper collaborated in leading England into the age of flight. They buzzed Buckingham Palace and the War Office with their powered airship, then developed a hang-glider kite, finally "Army Airplane #1." Capper, who knew the Wrights, risked his career in supporting Cody but Cody went on to repeated triumphs, winning the first British military aircraft trials in 1912. The very next year Cody died tragically in an aircraft accident. The British army buried him with full military honours after a procession attended by 50,000 mourners representing every British army regiment.
Pilots who write about flying often evoke magic. Hulls writes with the clarity and humour of St. Exupery, Gann, Bach and the handful of pilots whose love of flight becomes literature. The chapter "Flyers and Liars" captures the risk of early flight and the achievements of the Wrights and Cody, quoting the 1906 NEW YORK HERALD: "Despite extravagant claims, history would show that by 1908 only five humans had acquired significant time flying heavier-than-air machines. Two were dead--Otto Lilienthal and Percy Pilcher, a Scots engineer who had studied with him, died in flying accidents." Cody and the Wrights were the only ones with more than brief seconds in heavier-than-air flight. In all the other claims, no one knew enough to ask the key question: "How did you learn to fly?"
Coupled with illustrator David Weitzman's illustrations of what it took to learn even to make a simple turn, Hulls depicts the Wrights' and Cody's bravery and brilliance as they risked death to master flight. Among Cody's inventions: the variable-pitch propeller, whose efficiency Cody tested by tethering his airplane to a tree at Farnborough (a flight-test locale that became, decades earlier, the British equivalent of Edwards AFB). When the tree died recently, the RAE honored Cody by recreating the tree in aluminium on its original site.
While directed at younger readers, "Rider" is a wonderful book for anyone of any age interested in great American characters such as Cody and the Wrights, a must for pilots or indeed anyone with a love of flight or who today flies safely in a modern airliner.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars if you like to fly, October 19, 2008
if you have a library on aviation and don't have this book, you are missing an important and colorful piece of the pie. this is fun easy reading with great illustrations and fills a gap in the usual version of american aviation history.
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