11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A first rate story of air combat in world war one, October 20, 1999
An excellent book which is sadly out of print. The story and characters met here also appear in Goshawk Squadron and Hornets Nest. This book gives a real feel of what it must have been like to fly and fight in the air in World War One. Like many of Derek Robinsons books it contains a combination of humour and horror. The relatively comfortable lives of the pilots on the ground is thrown into stark relief with the danger and discomfort of their lives in the air. I can highly recommend it
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
excellent character study of the effects of war, August 11, 1996
By A Customer
War Story is the first in a trilogy of sorts. It begins
the saga of Hornet Squadron in World War One (it is
continued in Piece of Cake and A Good Clean Fight which
take place during World War Two (by the same author)).
All three books are character focused rather than the usual
war fiction standard of being action based - though the
dogfighting scenes are incredibly well done.
Take All Quiet on the Western front, put the action in
Airplanes, and add excellent, and sometimes hilarious,
dialog, and you have War Story.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It takes no great skill to die, no skill at all..., October 18, 2008
WAR STORY is Derek Robinson's masterpiece. It is better than PIECE OF CAKE, which was filmed in 1988 for LWT, and it is better than GOSHAWK SQUADRON, which was nominated for the Booker Prize in 1971. It is simply an excellent novel every bit the equal of ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT or CATCH-22.
Unlike Robinson's other wartime aviation novels, this one gives us a single character to focus most of our attention on. Paxton is a young pilot, fresh from flight school, who thinks that the First World War is the greatest thing to ever happen to the world. He is longing for the chance to sink his teeth into the enemy and come home a hero. Instead he makes a mess of his very first mission -- to lead six replacement planes across the channel -- and becomes an air-gunner, paired with a cynical veteran pilot. He witnesses the Battle of the Somme, which he thinks is a great opportunity for the British cavalry to show their stuff. He meets a rich English girl who throws extravagant parties for the soldiers, and he boasts to her about the Germans he's killed.
Watching him butt heads with the more experienced pilots is perhaps the major conflict of the book, and a great well of black comedy. Paxton simply doesn't understand why no one else seems to be having a good time. He even argues with his pilot in midair. But no one can remain unchanged forever, which Paxton discovers by the end of the book.
The rest of Hornet Squadron is not left out. We are introduced to Kellaway -- who will reappear in PIECE OF CAKE and A GOOD CLEAN FIGHT in the next war; Cleve-Cutler, the new commanding officer who fortifies his pilots with Hornet's Sting, a potent mix of every type of booze imaginable; and Corporal Lacey, a public school-educated clerk, who tells us, "It takes no great skill to die. No skill at all, in fact. Thoroughly unqualified people do it all the time."
Until Robinson began writing, fiction of this sort was limited to the adventures of Biggles, hero of boy's-own pulp magazines. GOSHAWK SQUADRON changed that, and thank heaven. WAR STORY, by the end, is more moving and more focused than Robinson's other novels. It is funny and tragic in equal measure. Read it.
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