The author Malcolm Smith has been the Editor of Jabberwock, the
bi-annual journal of the Fleet Air Arm Museum, for two years and has
inherited the complete archive of editions dating back to the formation
of SOFFAAM in 1979. In browsing through these, it quickly became
apparent to him that they provided a unique archive of reminiscence of
the men and (occasionally) women who served in, or have been associated
with, the Fleet Air Arm since its formation in 1918. The Fleet Air Arm
were the branch of the British Royal Navy responsible for the operation
of naval aircraft, and its history is a varied one as these accounts
attest.
The Royal Navy, in common with the other armed services, expanded
enormously during the Second World War, so anecdotes from this period
naturally predominate. To illustrate the varied experiences of the
contributors, these are grouped into "War in the West" and "War in the
East". Whether drawn from peace or war, however, what emerges from these
pages is a particular spirit, peculiar to the Fleet Air Arm and
reflecting its somewhat hybrid nature; a spirit derived from a high
level of professional competence combined with a certain irreverence
towards Authority.