Johnnie Johnson is a character literally straight out of the pages of '
Boys Own'. By the end of the Second World War the RAF Spitfire pilot was
a household name in Britain, feted by Churchill and Eisenhower. Although
he missed the Battle of Britain, when slow- flying bombers were abundant
and easy targets for fighters, by 1945 he had notched up 381/2 enemy
'kills' - all fighters, which took far more skill to shoot down - and
was officially the RAF's top-scoring fighter ace. One of his most
impressive achievements was that, despite participating in over 1,000
combat missions, he was never shot down. His Spitfire was damaged once,
and on his return to base he apologised to his fitter, saying, 'I was
surrounded by six of them.' Aviation historian Dilip Sarkar spent many
hours with Johnson in the final years of the great man's life, recording
the last interviews Johnson ever gave. The book is infused with
breathtaking firsthand accounts from Johnnie himself and many of his
fellow Spitfire pilots, also interviewed by the author, and profusely
illustrated with photographs from Johnson's personal albums.