Here, Norman Franks tells the story, in words and images, of the
emergence of some of the greatest fighter aces to see action during the
first half of the First World War. He explores the manner in which the
situation developed from late 1914 to the late summer of 1916, the point
at which Oswald Boelcke helped form the German Jasta system that would
prove so devastating to the RFC and RNAS.
Utilizing images drawn from his large personal archive of photographs,
Franks profiles some of the greatest and most notorious aces, as well as
the aircraft in which they flew. The first years of the war saw some of
the bravest acts of pilot gallantry and ingenuity play out. Franks
celebrates the legacy of just a handful of these individuals,
participants on both sides, including Boelcke's premier ace Manfred Von
Richtofen, Lanoe Hawker, Georges Guynemer, Albert Ball, Lionel Rees,
Wilhelm Frankl, and Stanley Dallas amongst many others.