9780801878190-0801878195-America from the Air: An Aviator's Story (American Land Classics)

America from the Air: An Aviator's Story (American Land Classics)

ISBN-13: 9780801878190
ISBN-10: 0801878195
Edition: Revised ed.
Author: Wolfgang Langewiesche, Drake Hokanson, Carol A. Kratz
Publication date: 2004
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Format: Paperback 248 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780801878190
ISBN-10: 0801878195
Edition: Revised ed.
Author: Wolfgang Langewiesche, Drake Hokanson, Carol A. Kratz
Publication date: 2004
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Format: Paperback 248 pages

Summary

America from the Air: An Aviator's Story (American Land Classics) (ISBN-13: 9780801878190 and ISBN-10: 0801878195), written by authors Wolfgang Langewiesche, Drake Hokanson, Carol A. Kratz, was published by Johns Hopkins University Press in 2004. With an overall rating of 3.7 stars, it's a notable title among other Landscape (Architecture, Environmentalists & Naturalists, Professionals & Academics, Conservation, Nature & Ecology) books. You can easily purchase or rent America from the Air: An Aviator's Story (American Land Classics) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Landscape books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

"I am no helmeted, begoggled hero of the skies; picture me bookish, bespectacled, unable to hold even a teacup without rattling it. As a pilot, I am merely an amateur, and I know it. . . . I shouldn't be talking. But I can't help talking. For you take the air: the thin, substanceless air that can be made to bear a man; you take America; and you take an airplane, which of all the works of man is the nearest to a living being-you take those things and mix them up, and they will act as a drug which will knock all proper reticence right out of you. And so, here I go talking . . ."-from America from the Air In 1927, Charles Lindbergh made his historic solo flight across the Atlantic; Amelia Earhart became the first woman to do so in 1932. And so was born the golden age of flying. Aviators became the era's new heroes and the airplane its icon. In early 1930s Chicago, a German-born graduate student became fascinated by the airplane and its usefulness as a great geographic and sociological tool. Wolfgang Langewiesche sold his car and used his meager salary to pay for flying lessons at 25 cents a minute. With the same passion America had taken to the road a decade earlier, Langewiesche took to the air. He eagerly inhaled the landscape and breathed observations about the country, writing a series of books that describe the heady excitement and freedom of flight and the stunning views of his adopted country from an entirely new vantage point-the sky. This new edited volume revives the writings from two of his now out-of-print books. America from the Air draws from Langewiesche's classic account of his early experiences as a pilot, I'll Take the High Road (first published in 1939 and praised by the New York Times as "a stirring and revealing story, told with sensitiveness and lucidity and with the warmth of a modest personal charm"), and selections from his 1951 memoir, A Flier's World, to create a distinctive book that provides a

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