British
031644 - MOSQUITO: The RAF's Legendary Wooden Wonder and Its Most Extraordinary Mission
By Rowland White
Built of lightweight wood, powered by two growling Rolls-Royce Merlin engines, impossibly aerodynamic, headspinningly fast and armed to the teeth, the de Havilland Mosquito was the war-winning wonder that should never have existed: the aircraft the RAF didn't think it wanted then couldn't do without.
Flying on operations barely eighteen months after a single prototype was ordered off the drawing board, it was the answer to its pilots' prayers: a stunningly versatile warplane capable of leaving the Luftwaffe in its wake to attack when and where the enemy was least expecting it.
Excelling as a spyplane, night-fighter and pathfinder for Bomber Command's heavies the Mossie's reputation was cemented by a series of daredevil bombing raids across occupied Europe, including on Berlin itself, where only surprise, speed and precision could ensure success.
So when Churchill's top secret Special Operations Executive needed to destroy the Gestapo HQ in the centre of downtown Copenhagen to prevent a devastating Nazi last stand that might prolong the war for many months, there was only one machine for the job.
Format | Hardback |
Pages | 560 |
Publication Date | Available |
Pictures |
16 pages of photos, some colour |
Width (mm) |
162 |
Height (mm) | 240 |
Dust Jacket | Yes |
ISBN | 978-1-78763-453-4 |
Price |
£20.00 |