Hailed as the finest combat aviation novel to emerge from the Vietnam
War, Flight of the Intruder spent twenty-eight weeks on the New York
Times hardcover bestseller list and became one of the top twenty
bestselling first novels of all time. An instant classic, the book was
translated into more than twenty languages and made into a major motion
picture. Its hero, Jake Grafton, became a household name and the star of
many more Coonts' bestsellers.
Without question, the strength of the book lies in its flying scenes
when Jake Grafton straps himself into the cockpit of his A-6 Intruder.
Jake's love of flying is contagious whether you are hearing the book for
the first time or listening to it for the third. No one better captures
the world of Navy carrier pilots than Stephen Coonts. An Intruder pilot
who flew combat missions off the deck of the USS Enterprise in the
Vietnam War, Coonts lived the life he writes about, and he puts readers
inside the hearts and minds of the pilots to reveal a world unknown to
those outside the naval aviators' fraternity. Few will forget the book's
final gut-wrenching scene when Jake's once-innocent love of flying gives
way to guilt and frustration and the need to give meaning to the deaths
of his comrades.