Title | : | Danger and Poetry: One Glider Pilot's First Hundred Hours, from Flight School to Rescue Mission |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0997355301 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780997355307 |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 136 |
Publication | : | Published September 20, 2016 |
Particularly recommended for:
- Individuals curious to learn about the joys and challenges of gliding and soaring in a sailplane
- Prospective or existing aviators interested in the mental aspects of the pilot training journey
- Novice or student pilots eager to compare notes on flight training basics and early milestones
- Airplane pilots aspiring to upgrade to more affordable and more silent aerial experiences
- Young freedom lovers, who in many countries can legally fly solo in a glider at age 14
- Flight instructors (especially CFI-G) seeking relevant reading material for their students
- Fixed-base operators (FBO) looking to stock, display, and retail enticing products
Danger and Poetry: One Glider Pilot's First Hundred Hours, from Flight School to Rescue Mission Reviews
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If you feel like flying, actually flying for real, i.e. take over the sky, this is the book for you.
A skydiver myself, I had never considered flying planes, let alone gliders. "Too technical", "too expensive", "not enough sensations compared to skydiving". I read Danger and poetry in a matter of hours - the duration of a glider flight - for what opened up my mind to the elegant world of flying gliders. The author, Joe Karam, seems to be a rare breed of a scientist morphed into a poet... or the other way around I'm not sure. All the technical questions a beginner like me might wonder about are progressively answered with acute teaching and recounting skills, while Karam's way with words embarks us on a trip that just makes us want to take up gliding. A trip whereby, as a skydiver, I could reconnect with my own courage against the danger of the skies. A trip whereby I could sense the absolute magic and uniqueness of gliding: the promise to fly, actually fly, for hours and hours with no fuel. Like a bird. At odds with the 45 seconds of skydiving free fall, yet with as much magic. Did I choose the wrong way to fly ? The comparison stops there, but I'm definitely trying out gliding soon. -
Heartfelt and insightful. The enthusiasm for flying comes across so nicely. Joe's eloquence soars just like the gliders he writes about. This is a book about aviation, but it's really a book about joy. It's a joy to read. Recommended for anyone looking for inspiration with a touch of danger.