INSCRIBED BY FAMOUS WWII FIGHTER PILOT, MILITARY TEST PILOT, AND CIVIL AIR SHOW PIONEER BOB HOOVER
HOOVER, R.A. “Bob” with SHAW, Mark. Forever Flying. Fifty Years of High-Flying Adventures, from Barnstorming in Prop Planes to Dogfighting Germans to Testing Supersonic Jets. New York: Pocket Books, (1996). Octavo, original half blue cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of this autobiography of R.A. “Bob” Hoover, the famous WWII ace, test pilot, and air show daredevil, inscribed: “To Barbara, I enjoyed [my] visit with you at my office. Bob Hoover.”
Often referred to as “the pilot’s pilot” in aviation circles, Bob Hoover spent over half a century flying for the military and as an air show pilot. He learned to fly in Nashville while working at a grocery store to pay for lessons. By the time he was a proficient flyer, World War II was underway. The military took advantage of his skills and used him as a test pilot before sending him to Europe to fly combat missions. Hoover was shot down when his Spitfire malfunctioned and he ended up in prison camp in Germany. After multiple escape attempts, Hoover finally managed to steal an airplane and fly to the Netherlands. After the war, Hoover served as Chuck Yeager’s back-up test pilot. The two became close friends. Yet civilian life called to Hoover and he left the military for work in private industry. He flew test flights and set records for transcontinental and “time to climb” speed. His greatest success, however, was in civil air shows. He became known for his daredevil stunts executed in business aircraft. Many consider him to be one of the founders of aerobatics. Jimmy Doolittle called him “the greatest stick-and-rudder man who ever lived” and the Smithsonian’s Air & Space Museum named him the third greatest aviator in history. With Foreword by Chuck Yeager.
Book with slight soiling to boards and small bump to top edge, dust jacket fine. A handsome inscribed copy in very nearly fine condition.