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Frank Harvey

Autor von Air War: Vietnam

14+ Werke 125 Mitglieder 1 Rezension

Werke von Frank Harvey

Air War: Vietnam (1967) 43 Exemplare
I'm All Right Jack [1959 film] (1959) — Screenwriter — 29 Exemplare
The 39 Steps [1959 film] (1959) — Screenwriter — 14 Exemplare
Jet (1962) 9 Exemplare
Air Force! (1959) 8 Exemplare
Hudasky's Raiders (1966) 6 Exemplare
Nightmare County 3 Exemplare
The Lion Pit (1970) 2 Exemplare
The White Mercenaries (1972) 2 Exemplare
The Poltergeist (1947) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Reporting Vietnam: American Journalism 1959-1969, Volume 1 (1998) — Mitwirkender — 325 Exemplare
The Saturday Evening Post Reader of Fantasy and Science Fiction (1963) — Mitwirkender — 102 Exemplare
High Gear: Great Stories About Fast Cars and Their Drivers (1955) — Mitwirkender — 11 Exemplare
A Cavalcade of Collier's (1959) — Mitwirkender — 10 Exemplare
Saturday Evening Post Stories 1958 (1959) — Mitwirkender — 5 Exemplare
The Saturday Evening Post, Vol. 231, No. 16, Oct 18 1958 (1958) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar

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Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Harvey, Frank
Rechtmäßiger Name
Harvey, Frank Laird
Geburtstag
1913-02-15
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Geburtsort
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

I think it was the cover art which prompted me to buy this. I do like books about the Space Race, and while a cherry-picker was never used to deliver astronauts to their space capsule – whatever capsule that’s supposed to be on the cover – it all looked close enough to reality to appeal. If you know what I mean. The contents turned out to be somewhat different to what I’d expected. For a start, I’d thought it was non-fiction, a series of essays written for the popular press about the Space Race, or extrapolations of its future. It turned out to be entirely fictional, albeit based on extrapolations of the state of aviation and space technology in the US at the time. There are eight stories, originally published chiefly in the Saturday Evening Post. One story is about the first X-15 flight to achieve orbit (the X-15 never did), another is about a pilot whose wife is pressurising him to leave USAF and go into business but his successful prevention of a disaster on a flight persuades him to say. Another story has a fighter pilot “demoted” to transport planes but he manages to prevent a fatal crash during a catastrophic failure of his plane’s systems and that persuades his superiors he should be back flying fighters. It’s all very gung-ho and USAF rah rah rah, and while the technical details are spot-on, the extrapolations are closer to the military’s wishful thinking than what actually happened. This is Man In Space Soonest rather than Skylab, if you know what I mean. The prose is not even serviceable, it’s “journalese” and presents each story as a cross between fiction and a personal account. It’s fun, if you’re into mid-twentieth century US aviation fiction, but its appeal these days, ie sixty years later, is going to be limited pretty much to fans of that. Like, er, me.… (mehr)
 
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iansales | Aug 1, 2019 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
14
Auch von
6
Mitglieder
125
Beliebtheit
#160,151
Bewertung
3.9
Rezensionen
1
ISBNs
4

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