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The women who flew for Hitler : a true story of soaring ambition and searing rivalry / Clare Mulley

Catalog Data

Author:
Mulley, Clare  Search this
Subject:
Reitsch, Hanna  Search this
Stauffenberg, Melitta Gräfin 1903-1945  Search this
Physical description:
xxiii, 470 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Type:
Biography
Biographies
Place:
Germany
Date:
2017
Notes:
NASM copy purchased with funds from the S. Dillon Ripley Endowment.
Contents:
Preface: Truth and lives -- Longing for freedom, 1903-1932 -- Searching for the fabulous, 1912-1933 -- Public relations, 1933-1936 -- Public appointments, 1936-1937 -- Hovering, 1938 -- Descent, 1938-1939 -- Women at war, 1939-1941 -- Defying gravity, 1942-1943 -- Under attack, 1943 -- Operation Self-Sacrifice, 1943-1944 -- Operation Valkyrie, 1944 -- In the camps, 1944 -- In the bunker, 1945 -- Final flight -- Liberation and detention, 1945-1946 -- Reputations -- Epilogue: A time of contradictions
Summary:
"Despite Hitler's dictates on women's place being in the home, two fiercely defiant female pilots were awarded the Iron Cross during the Second World War. Other than this unique distinction and a passion for flying that bordered on addiction, these women could not have been less alike. One was Aryan Nazi poster-girl Hanna Reitsch, an unsurpassed pilot, who is now best-known for being the last person to fly into Berlin-under-siege in April 1945, in order to beg Hitler to let her save him. He refused and killed himself two days later. The other pilot was her antithesis, a brilliant aeronautical engineer and test-pilot Melitta Schenk Gräfin von Stauffenberg who was part Jewish. She used her value to the Luftwaffe as a means to protect her family. When her brother-in-law, Claus von Stauffenberg, planned the Valkyrie attack to assassinate the Fuehrer, she agreed to provide the transport. Both women repeatedly risked their lives to change the history of the Third Reich--one in support of and the other in opposition. Mulley shows, through dazzling film-like scenes suffused in glamour and danger, that their interwoven dramas are a powerful forgotten story of conformity and resistance and the very strength of women at the heart of the Second World War"-- Provided by publisher.
Topic:
World War, 1939-1945--Aerial operations, German  Search this
World War, 1939-1945--Women  Search this
Air pilots, Military  Search this
Women air pilots  Search this
Aeronautical engineers  Search this
Iron Cross  Search this
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_1089152