The Luftwaffe in Colour: The Victory Years, 19391942
English
By (author): Christophe Cony Jean-Louis Roba
This remarkable work pulls the lid off one of the legendary air forces in history at the very peak of its power
face=Calibri>unveiling the and machines as they truly existed day
face=Calibri>today, underneath the propaganda of their own regime and the scare stories of their enemies.
In Hitlers Germany, colour photography was primarily co-opted for state purposes, such as the military publication Signal, or the Luftwaffes own magazine, Der Adler (Eagle). But a number of men had cameras of their own, and in this painstakingly acquired collection, originally published in France, we can witness true life on Germanys airfields during the period of the Luftwaffes ascendancy.
Thus not only do we see famous planes such as the Me-109, Ju-87 or He-111, but the wide variety of more obscure types with which the Germans began the war. The array of Arados, Dorniers, Heinkels
face=Calibri> not to mention elegant 4-engine Condors
face=Calibri> that were initially employed in the war are here in plain sight and full colour, providing not only an insight into WWII history but a model makers dream.
Just as fascinating are the shots of the airmen themselves, along with their groundcrews
face=Calibri> full of confidence and cheer as they bested every other air force in Europe during these years, with the single exception of the RAFs Fighter Command in late-summer 1940. But that was no big stumbling block to the Luftwaffe, which had bigger fish to fry in Russia and North Africa the following year.
In the authors next work, The Years of Defeat, we will see how the war turned more grim for the Luftwaffe, even as its expertise and skill at more deadly aircraft designs, increased. In The Victory Years we have a uniquely intimate view of an air force at the very apex of its capabilities. See more
face=Calibri>unveiling the and machines as they truly existed day
face=Calibri>today, underneath the propaganda of their own regime and the scare stories of their enemies.
In Hitlers Germany, colour photography was primarily co-opted for state purposes, such as the military publication Signal, or the Luftwaffes own magazine, Der Adler (Eagle). But a number of men had cameras of their own, and in this painstakingly acquired collection, originally published in France, we can witness true life on Germanys airfields during the period of the Luftwaffes ascendancy.
Thus not only do we see famous planes such as the Me-109, Ju-87 or He-111, but the wide variety of more obscure types with which the Germans began the war. The array of Arados, Dorniers, Heinkels
face=Calibri> not to mention elegant 4-engine Condors
face=Calibri> that were initially employed in the war are here in plain sight and full colour, providing not only an insight into WWII history but a model makers dream.
Just as fascinating are the shots of the airmen themselves, along with their groundcrews
face=Calibri> full of confidence and cheer as they bested every other air force in Europe during these years, with the single exception of the RAFs Fighter Command in late-summer 1940. But that was no big stumbling block to the Luftwaffe, which had bigger fish to fry in Russia and North Africa the following year.
In the authors next work, The Years of Defeat, we will see how the war turned more grim for the Luftwaffe, even as its expertise and skill at more deadly aircraft designs, increased. In The Victory Years we have a uniquely intimate view of an air force at the very apex of its capabilities. See more
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