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Wayne Biddle (2)

Auteur de Barons of the Sky

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Wayne Biddle, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

2 oeuvres 119 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Wayne Biddle, who shared a Pulitzer Prize for his reporting at the New York Times, is on the faculty of the writing seminars at the Johns Hopkins University

Œuvres de Wayne Biddle

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a broad-strokes account of the "big business'' aspect of U.S. aviation and its dependence on the military…
panoramic history of the rise of the American aerospace industry traces the careers of the men whose names became synonymous with today's military-industrial complex: Glenn Martin of Martin Marietta, Donald Douglas of McDonnell Douglas, Jack Northrop of Northrop, and Allan and Malcolm Loughead of Lockheed. Weaving together institutional history and individual biography, Wayne Biddle depicts the years of uncertainty after World War I, the bonanza of World War II, and the cutthroat postwar market. Unlike the automobile industry, the aircraft industry could never be sustained by the middle-class consumer economy, and these legendary founders had to depend on the federal government to keep their companies aloft. Barons of the Sky tells a thrilling story of obsessed men who, chasing their dreams of flight and success, created the modern aerospace weapons industry.

story of the aviation pioneers whose business interests resulted in mega-corporations such as Boeing, Lockheed, Martin Marietta, Northrup and McDonnell Douglas. The book describes how the American aircraft industry weathered the Depression by turning itself into an international munitions business. Operating under something of a cloud in prewar isolationist days, the industry profited grossly when "it became necessary for Washington to beg the merchants of death to become the saviors of civilization.'' (During World War II these manufacturers turned out 304,139 aircraft for the military)
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Signalé
MasseyLibrary | Mar 8, 2018 |
The entire point of this book is to lay out the thesis that von Braun was not an apolitical, space-age dreamer, but a Nazi party member who knowingly used slave labor to build weapons for Germany ergo von Braun was a war criminal.
The book is pretty well-written, but runs the risk of hitting the reader over the head with the thesis. Each chapter could be called, "Terrible things happening and how von Braun knowingly participated." The author clearly lays out how von Braun became an SS officer, knew the rockets he was building were weapons, and further he knew that slaves at Dora/Mittelwork were building the weapons under horrific conditions.
The book spends little time talking about von Braun's time in the US. One's lead to the conclusion that von Braun used his technical know-how to save him from the fate he deserved, execution or a life sentence. Unfortunately, this book has come out long after von Braun died and now few people remember him.
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Signalé
cblaker | 1 autre critique | May 11, 2012 |
 
Signalé
Digger.Barnes | 1 autre critique | Feb 10, 2011 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
119
Popularité
#166,388
Évaluation
3.0
Critiques
3
ISBN
20
Langues
1

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