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Duel Of Eagles: The Struggle for the Skies, 1918-1940

Duel Of Eagles: The Struggle for the Skies, 1918-1940
By Peter Townsend

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Product Description

Group Captain Peter Townsend - himself a Battle of Britain pilot - traces the background to the conflict from the defeat and destruction of the Kaiser's air force to the long days of 1940 when Spitfires and Messerschmitts fought their battles to the death over England. Dogfights in the sky, ruthless political manoeuvres, legendary heroes of the air like Richthofen (the 'Red Baron') and Douglas Bader - Duel of Eagles combines all of these in a colourful, dramatic and evocative account of the furious air conflict that saved Britain from German invasion.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #785916 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-12-07
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 480 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Peter Townsend was himself a Squadron Leader during the Battle of Britain and later fought in Night-fighters.


Customer Reviews

The most human account of the Battle of Britain available.5
It has been some time since I last read Duel of Eagles but I can remember being transfixed. Prior to this I had read as many accounts of the Battle of Britain as I could find. In general they fell into two catagories, those which were somewhat triumphant in victory, and others which were too scant and of little merit. When Townsend first wrote Duel of Eagles, in the late sixties, the market was saturated with 'blood and thunder' books and so he endeavoured to present a book that was intelligent and all encompassing, rather than dealing with the heroics of individuals, such as in 'reach for the skies'. To do this, he travelled to meet and interview a host of pilots and their relatives from both sides (even Herman Goring's daughter), and has collected the best eyewitness account available. Interspersed are the poignant last letters home from pilots that never returned.

Peter Townsend was himself a hero of the Battle of Britain and logged more flying hours than any other British pilot during the battle. Moreover he found himself fighting by day and then fighting by night during the Blitz. And yet these remarkable achievements are hardly hinted at in his book because he is determined to present the whole picture. It reads as though he enjoyed and was fascinated by all the things that he has discovered and written about. Events of which he must have been blissfully unaware during the early thirties are described as if they were being fitted into his own personal jigsaw puzzle as he tries to make sense of his career in the RAF.

Although Townsend gives a thorough background to events, specifically to the rise to power of Hitler and Herman Goring (commander of the Luftwaffe), it is the lives of the young pilots of both sides that he concentrates on, from intial training, to their deaths in some cases.

The work fizzes with excitement and runs the Gamut of emotions. I tried for many years to find this book and was delighted when I learned of its re-publication. Far more involving than any historian's 'revised' account, for me it is peerless.

Amazing5
Superb book which I could not put down. The factual nature makes the content akin to the same as an educational text book but the way it is written is engaging and highly digestable.

I would recommend this to anyone with even a fleeting interest in the Battle of Britain. More than any other book I have read on the subject it balances historical narrative with the personal tales, intertwining lives of Townsend, his compatriots and his adversaries.