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Shark
Squadron Pilot
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Shark
Squadron Pilot
By
Bert Horden Independant Books, 200 pages. $49.50
As
our greatest generation pass on, it seems more of them are putting
their stories down on paper before they die. This is one such case
being a WWII fighter pilot’s recollections, and like the many that
have been released in the past 10 years or so, it follows a similar
pattern.
Bert was a young English lad who joined the RAF and was posted to
112 Sqn, RAF to fly Kittyhawks in North Africa. The Shark Squadron
was so named for the distinctive shark’s mouth painted under their
aircraft’s propeller and became well known to the Afrika Korps.
The historians among you will also recognise this unit as one Clive
‘Killer’ Caldwell commanded for a while, but this was before Bert
arrived and there is bare mention of other Australians in the unit.
Bert never made ace status, but survived 130 ops before being tour
expired and posted off to instructional duties back in the UK. It
is mostly a story about service life in the desert and of the constant
strain of operations on pilot, ground crew and aircraft.
The book is based on Bert’s flying log book, diary and letters home,
but while written in chronological sequence, it dwells on several
themes and is contradictory in some places.
That aside, it is a light, easy read and is well illustrated with
Bert’s own photographs.
– Air Cdre Mark Lax
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