This is not a story of the making of the SR-71 , nor is it a technical digest of theThis is, of course, fine with me, and what follows are a series of anecdotes about the author's time with the SR-71, from his training to seeing the final flight of the plane as the last model was transferred to the Smithsonian Institute in Washington.
many intriguing facts and figures about the plane. . . Instead, this book is one man's view
of what it was like to fly the world's fastest jet.
The good: there's a lot of interesting material here, even given that Shul glosses over the actual missions for the most part (which of course makes sense, given the nature of the SR-71's duties.
The bad: the overall tone is akin to the narration of Starship Troopers, and many passages end abruptly (and not just because what would follow would be classified)
The verdict: an easy read with interesting flying stories, so try it if you can find it.
I understand that this is out of print, so I'd recommend seeing if there's a version for the Kindle or if it's available used somewhere.
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