Dambuster

The Life of Guy Gibson VC

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Pub Date Jul 06 2017 | Archive Date Jul 07 2017

Description

FEW MEN HAVE A BETTER CLAIM TO BE CALLED A LEGEND IN THEIR OWN LIFETIME THAN GUY GIBSON.

Leader of the famous Dambuster Raid of May 1943, Gibson himself was tragically in an air crash in 1944.

Born in India in 1918 and brought up in England, Guy Gibson joined the RAF in November 1936. Thereafter his career can be seen as a battle between, on the one hand, his uncertain temperament and less than ideal private life, and, on the other, his undoubted skills as an airman and as a leader of men.

The war was to bring him adventure and, later, fame. He took part in the first aerial attack of the war, on the Kiel Canal; he served in Fighter Command and then, in 1943, came the famous raid on the Mohne and Eder dams for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross.

By now a hero of international fame, he was sent on a Public Relations tour of North America, but he was above all a flyer and, refusing to remain grounded, he died an airman’s death.

This new edition, which draws on conversations with members of Gibson’s family and on notes made by his widow, expands upon his early life in a severely dysfunctional family, his unhappy marriage and the possible reason for his untimely death in September 1944.

FEW MEN HAVE A BETTER CLAIM TO BE CALLED A LEGEND IN THEIR OWN LIFETIME THAN GUY GIBSON.

Leader of the famous Dambuster Raid of May 1943, Gibson himself was tragically in an air crash in 1944.

Born in...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781786080257
PRICE £10.00 (GBP)

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Featured Reviews

The efficacy of the Dambusters Raid of 16-17 May 1943 remains disputed by historians, with the trend amongst recent authors and documentary-makers to argue that its success lay primarily in propaganda terms (although the importance of propaganda in wartime should not be underestimated). What is beyond doubt is the skill and courage displayed by all those who took part, notably the commander of 617 Squadron, Guy Gibson, who was awarded a V.C. for flying alongside other attacking aircraft to draw anti-aircraft fire, after dropping his own ‘bouncing bomb’.

In 1994 two biographies of Gibson appeared: Richard Morris’s ‘Guy Gibson’ and Susan Ottaway’s ‘Dambuster. The Life of Guy Gibson VC’. The latter has now been reprinted in a new updated and revised edition, with a new Introduction. Amongst other things, using her contacts with the Gibson family, Ottaway seeks to set the record straight regarding what Morris wrote about the nature of the young Gibson’s dysfunctional family.

Ottaway’s book is a labour of love, arising out of her childhood reading of Gibson’s ‘Enemy Coast Ahead’ but her Bibliography suggests some surprising omissions in those labours (unless the books have been consulted but not recorded) as there’s no reference to Max Arthur’s ‘Dambusters’, Helmuth Euler’s ‘The Dambuster Raid’ or ‘Guy Gibson’ by Geoff Simpson, let alone to the more general works on the strategic bombing offensive by Noble Frankland, Sir Charles Webster and R. J. Overy.

Ottaway’s book, although thoughtful and making particularly good use of Evelyn Gibson’s unpublished manuscript about her husband, is simply not an academic book, as it lacks the scholarly apparatus of footnotes. This undoubtedly helps to make it a more readable study of Gibson’s character but severely constrains its value as an historical work.

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