Archive for Author 'Donald Capps', only excerpts shown, click title for full entry.
US Guided Missiles: The Definitive Reference Guide
by Bill Yenne
Ok. Your eyes are glazing over. No! This is a fine book, well written, important. Cheap even. What’s not to like??
Jimmy Stewart: Bomber Pilot
by Starr Smith
Oscar-winning actor Stewart was a star and saw the stars: he was a competent pilot even before he entered the service, attained the rank of Brigadier General in the Air Force Reserve, and even went Mach 2 in the back seat of a B-58 Hustler jet bomber.
Grumman F6F Hellcat
by Corwin “Corky” Meyer & Steve Ginter
With a kill-to-loss ratio of 19-to-1 and producing 307 aces the “Wildcat’s big brother,” specifically built to counter the Japanese Zero, was probably the most important Naval aircraft in WWII.
War on the Waters: The Union & Confederate Navies, 1861–1865
by James M. McPherson
Almost a David-and-Goliath scenario! Civil War-era naval engagements were relatively small and few but had a disproportionately large impact. This excellent book too is relatively small—and makes a large impact.
History’s Greatest Automotive Mysteries, Myths, and Rumors Revealed
by Preston Lerner and Matt Stone
Did you hear the one about . . . ? Next time you start an argument at a cocktail party, come prepared! You don’t have to be a gearhead to recognize a lot of the names/events in this book.
Conspiracy of Secrets
by Bobbie Neate
Ex-BRM boss Louis Stanley was a fixture on the GP circuit. This biographical detective story by his stepdaughter turns everything you know about him on its ear and has repercussions far beyond the world of motor racing.
The 1912 Milwaukee Races: Vanderbilt Cup and Grand Prize
by Joel E. Finn
Run on public roads these races were the largest sporting events of their day. They did draw record crowds—and still incurred losses and were therefore not repeated. A hundred years later, this book most thoroughly revisits the subject.
In the Name Glory: 1976, The Greatest Ever Sporting Duel
by Tom Rubython
If you know your racing history you know 1976 as the year Ferrari driver Niki Lauda got so terribly burned which set into motion truly unusual events, great drama, and great controversy. This book scratches only the surface.
Killer Rays: Story of the Douglas F4D Skyray and F5D Skylancer
by Mark Frankel
From concept to first prototype, flight testing, carrier qualifications and operational history, this solid book presents the history of the U.S. Navy’s first operational delta-wing aircraft.
American Secret Pusher Fighters of World War II: XP-54, XP-55, and XP-56
by Gerald H. Balzer
These creative aircraft proposals are an example of aerodynamic theory being way ahead of engine development. They are also examples of the US trying to regain ground to European aircraft development.
Poetry in Motion: An Autobiography of a Supreme Grand Prix Driver
by Tony Brooks
The title alludes to Brooks’ combination of speed and smoothness. Publicity-shy, he never sought the limelight so it took 15 years of prodding to get this autobiography out of him. Find out what made him one of Britain’s premier racing drivers of the 1950s.
Izod IndyCar Series 2012 Historical Record Book
by Steve Shunck and Tim Sullivan
Indy cars have a long, and therefore convoluted, history. A book that finally gathers all the records and untangles the history seems a fine thing—except that it is plagued with sins of omission and commission.