Spitfire
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 5,078
- Location
- Copenhagen, Denmark.
Obviously not.
OK. I'll jump to it a let you know, if it's any good...Tally Ho!
I don't know why anyone would bother reading something like that when there are plenty of accounts written at the time, or written later by people who were there and lived through it.
Nearly all such books suffer because the writer sees things through modern eyes and does not understand the reality of the times.
Obviously not.
OK. I'll jump to it a let you know, if it's any good...Tally Ho!
I don't know why anyone would bother reading something like that when there are plenty of accounts written at the time, or written later by people who were there and lived through it.
Nearly all such books suffer because the writer sees things through modern eyes and does not understand the reality of the times.
If there is a downside it's that the author turns almost to cliché when she describes feelings and love.
"He was the most beautiful man, she had ever seen!"...kind of stuff.
I recall seeing a documentary one time (a long time ago) and the RAF pilot was describing his time in the Battle of Britain and he would be directed to height and position by a female plotter and he was talking about her voice - and how it was the most beautiful voice he had ever heard … so feminine and the received pronunciation and utterly engaging. He'd look forward to sorties just so he could hear her sweet voice again and he'd imagine how she'd look; an English rose to match the serene voice. I remember him saying that he'd fantasize in-flight about meeting her on a shore with the surf and spume blowing …
Anyway that was him waxing poetic and lyrical.
And he went on to say that he later got to talking with this most enigmatic voice over the R/T and asked her out on a date !
And he got a car for the occasion and proceeded to imagine the most wonderfully romantic picnic together … then as he drove up to where she said she'd be, she was there in her WRAF uniform and he said that, as it turned out, that she was really rather very unattractive and he drove right on by … and she never knew.
If there is a downside it's that the author turns almost to cliché when she describes feelings and love.
"He was the most beautiful man, she had ever seen!"...kind of stuff.
I recall seeing a documentary one time (a long time ago) and the RAF pilot was describing his time in the Battle of Britain and he would be directed to height and position by a female plotter and he was talking about her voice - and how it was the most beautiful voice he had ever heard … so feminine and the received pronunciation and utterly engaging. He'd look forward to sorties just so he could hear her sweet voice again and he'd imagine how she'd look; an English rose to match the serene voice. I remember him saying that he'd fantasize in-flight about meeting her on a shore with the surf and spume blowing …
Anyway that was him waxing poetic and lyrical.
And he went on to say that he later got to talking with this most enigmatic voice over the R/T and asked her out on a date !
And he got a car for the occasion and proceeded to imagine the most wonderfully romantic picnic together … then as he drove up to where she said she'd be, she was there in her WRAF uniform and he said that, as it turned out, that she was really rather very unattractive and he drove right on by … and she never knew.
He was young and dumb! We all know, that no one can live up to the imagination.