Chasing the Demon

Release Date:- 2018-07-24

Reviews Counts:- 28

User Average Rating:- 4

Availability:- In Stock

Kind:- ebook

$13.99

NATIONAL BESTSELLER ā€¢ At the end of World War II, a band of aces gathered in the Mojave Desert on a Top Secret quest to break the sound barrierā€“nicknamed "The Demon" by pilots. The true story of what happened in those skies has never been told. 

Speed. In 1947, it represented the difference between victory and annihilation.

After Hiroshima, the ability to deliver a nuclear device to its target faster than oneā€™s enemy became the singular obsession of American war planners. And so, in the earliest days of the Cold War, a highly classified program was conducted on a desolate air base in Californiaā€™s Mojave Desert. Its aim: to push the envelope of flight to new frontiers. There gathered an extraordinary band of pilots, including Second World War aces Chuck Yeager and George Welch, who risked their lives flying experimental aircraft to reach Mach 1, the so-called sound barrier, which pilots called ā€œthe demon.ā€

Shrouding the program in secrecy, the US military reluctantly revealed that the ā€œbarrierā€ had been broken two months later, after the story was leaked to the press. The full truth has never been fully revealedā€”until now.

Chasing the Demon, from decorated fighter pilot and acclaimed aviation historian Dan Hampton, tells, for the first time, the extraordinary true story of mankindā€™s quest for Mach 1. Here, of course, is twenty-four-year-old Captain Chuck Yeager, who made history flying the futuristic Bell X-1 faster than the speed of sound on October 14, 1947. Officially Yeager was the first to achieve supersonic flight, but drawing on new interviews with survivors of the program, including Yeagerā€™s former commander, as well as declassified files, Hampton presents evidence that a fellow Americanā€”George Welch, a daring fighter pilot who shot down a remarkable sixteen enemy aircraft during the Pacific Warā€”met the demon first, though he was not favored to wear the laurels, as he was now a civilian test pilot and was not flying the Bell X-1.

Chasing the Demon sets the race between Yeager and Welch in the context of aviation history, so that the reader can learn and appreciate their accomplishments as never before.

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