From National Book Award winner Martin W. Sandler, a fascinating look
at the week that brought aviation fever to the world
In 1903, the Wright brothers made three brief flights, and no one was
there to watch them. Six years later, Wilbur Wright traveled to Europe
to evangelicize about aviation and raise money for patents--and the
world got aviation fever. That summer, a group of champagne companies
organized the first ever international air meet in Rheims, France. They
knew they could throw a great party and sell a lot of champagne. They
didn't know that this single week would change the course of aviation
history. Through remarkable photographs, firsthand accounts, and lively
narrative, Marty Sandler tells the story of how the Grande Semaine
d'Aviation de la Champagne marked the public introduction to flight.