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TravelGives an excellent protrayal of the development and use as an top notch attack fighter, the best in the World at the start of WW II: and took the US close to a year to develop anything that could match it.
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This book covers the early succeses of the Japanes Navy from the early years in China to the fall of the empire and the decline of the zero fighter against the newer American aircraft. It is a detailed and interesting insight into the Navys dependence on air cover in all their land based and carrier operations in world war two. I found this book well written and very detailed. This is not a story to be read like a novel but...
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It's been a long time since I read the book, but I particularly recall Okumiya telling about losing an eye in aerial combat, and returning to fly and fight again, as a one-eyed fighter pilot. Also, the accounts of how he felt about seasoned pilots being "invited" to fly Kamikaze missions; and his description of the conditions late in the war when the Japanese pilots were out-planed, out-gunned, out-numbered, and virtually...
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Too much of what you hear in New York these days is merely a rehash of old styles. Where is the innovation that Jazz is supposed to feed upon?Fortunately we have Greg Osby. Osby is one of a few true innovators on the NY scene. The first time I heard "Concepticus in C" (the last piece in this CD), it was like a punch in the face, almost as hard as the first time I heard Coltrane's Giant Steps. I listened to this short...
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Masatake Okumiya, Jiro Horikoshi, and Martin Caidin teamed up in 1956 to write a balanced account of the Battle of Midway. Zero! is such a book. It tells, from the Japanese point of view, the story of the Battle of Midway. It goes from China through the Battle of Midway and beyond. A rip-roaring good read. It makes you feel like you're in the cockpit of the famous Japanese naval fighter alongside the likes of Saburo Sakai...
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