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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Great story, some endurance required,
By Roger Wilcox (an undisclosed secure location) - See all my reviews
This review is from: WINGS & WARRIORS PB (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight) (Paperback)
Military memoirs are kind of a tricky category. The authors usually aren't professional writers, but that's often a bonus rather a drawback. Donald Engen's book is perhaps somewhat of an exception to this rule."Wings and Warriors" is well worth reading, but it required a bit of grit to make it through to the end. Engen has a remarkable career as a naval aviator and test pilot, and goes on to become a Captain in the "black shoe" Navy. But his account often threatens to bog down in a welter of detail. Engen includes a lot of facts about a lot of different aircraft, and salutes a great many of his comrades and commanders, but the momentum of the narrative tends to suffer as a result. I found myself wishing the book had an appendix with a field guide to all the aircraft Engen describes. As Engen notes, there were many different types of jets produced in the early days, and he seems to have flown most of them. But it's hard to keep them straight, especially because Engen refers to them mostly by their original Navy designations, which are somewhat obscure today. (Engen gripes about the Pentagon-imposed "uniform" aircraft designations which eliminated the Navy system in the early 1960s.) Despite some excess baggage, "Wings and Warriors" has enough great stories along the way to make the trip worthwhile. As a test pilot, Engen relates why it isn't necessarily a good idea to turn off your jet's engine at high altitude just to see what happens. (Hint: the engine also keeps the cabin pressurized.) Test pilot Engen also flies a series of attempts to set the altitude record. He manages to best the Soviet mark, although not by a wide enough margin to make the record books. But he does a really nice job of relating the experience, and it's pretty clear there's no major disappointment involved. There are many other gems here as well. Mrs. Engen devises an unusual method to remind her flyboy hubby that he drove off with *both* sets of car keys that morning. The Engens move so frequently that one move is cancelled halfway to make way for the *next* move. Given command of an ammunition ship, black-shoed Captain Engen reveals himself as a world-class scrounger. It's not hard to understand why a crew would be intensely loyal to a skipper like that. I did find one minor factual error: during his carrier qualification, Engen refers to Point Oboe as the "large mausoleum" on the shores of Lake Michigan. The "mausoleum" is in fact the Bahai House of Worship in Wilmette, Illinois, not far from the former NAS Glenview. But Engen was there for all of one day over fifty years ago, so I suppose we'll give him a "fair pass" on that one. After the Navy, Engen went on to become the FAA adminstrator and the curator of the Smithsonian's Air and Space Museum. As this memoir makes clear, Engen is unusually well-qualified for both jobs.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic details of events and characters.,
By Lanerip@aol.com (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: WINGS & WARRIORS (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series) (Hardcover)
Don Engen always was number one in any command he served. He was the classic leader by example. My very own personal hero and mentor. He was what everyone else wanted to be like. As an author he told it the way it was and included even the most junior officers and was honest in his appraisal of the many events in his fantastic career. One of a kind.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
First-person account of the evolution of naval aviation,
By Captain B. J. Dysart, USN (Ret.) (bdysart@ids... (Springfield, Virginia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: WINGS & WARRIORS (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series) (Hardcover)
This book is both a engaging autobiograph--in which the author takes us from his days as a naval aviation cadet learning his trade in the "Yellow Peril" biplane trainers in 1942 through to his command of USS AMERICA in 1967--and a fascinating first-person narrative history of naval aviation during its period of most rapid and fundamental change. This era saw the development of all the technologies that form the foundation of naval aviation as we know it, including jet propulsion, angled flight decks, fresnel lens optical landing system, steam catapults, TACAN, supersonic flight, and air-to-air missiles. And Don Engen was in the thick of it all. This is a highly personal tale, a fast-paced collection of anecdotes, vignettes, and confessions. His recollections vividly convey the sense of adventure in exploring the unknown frontiers of new territory that infused the naval aviation in the "golden age" of its transition to jets.
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