In a companion volume to his Early Jet Fighters: British and American
1944-1954, Leo Marriott describes, using over 200 archive photographs,
the first decade in the development of the jet bomber. This was a time
of intense technical innovation which transformed the design and
capabilities of the bomber and gave birth to a range of classic military
aircraft in the USA, Great Britain, France and the Soviet Union. The
photographs take the story from the earliest jet bombers constructed in
Germany towards the end of the Second World War to the successful
designs both sides depended on through the first phase of the Cold
War.
The pace of development was rapid and remarkable, from initial
prototypes built in Germany - the Arado 234 and the Junkers Ju. 287 - to
the fleets of advanced jet bombers like the British Canberra and
V-bombers, the American B-47 and B-52 and the Soviet Il-28 Beagle and
Tu-16 Badger. The images of the prototypes give a fascinating insight
into the extraordinary technical challenges and the ambition and
inventiveness of the designers and manufacturers who overcame them.
Leo Marriott's vivid selection of photographs and his lucid historical
narrative offer the reader an overview of a dynamic stage in the
evolution of the design of military aircraft.