Having photographically covered the British Aces of World War I in his book British and American ...
American fliers arriving in Europe from September 1917 brought with them no aircraft. Instead, US...
Featuring photographs throughout, this book tells the story of the aces that flew this well-known...
A companion volume to German Aces of World War I - The Pictorial Record (Norman Franks & Greg Van...
New addition to the Images of War series, focussing on the Sopwith Camels flown over Italy during...
Volume 53 in this series covered Fokker D VII aces from the four elite Jagdgeschwadern of the Ger...
The Sopwith Pup was the forerunner of the hugely successful Sopwith Camel, which duly became the ...
The Albatros was the scourge of the RFC on the Western Front in 1916-17, with pilots of the calib...
The air aces of Imperial Germanys Luftstreitkräfte are an ever-popular subject among aviation his...
When the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service merged on 1 April 1918, to form the R...
Following the extraordinary career of a Second World War bomber pilot, Flying Among Heroes brings...
Lively tales of aerial combat in the legendary Typhoon fighter
This is the biography of the renowned WWII South African Spitfire pilot Adolf (Sailor) Malan. The...
It is a recognized fact that, had the war gone badly for the Allies on the India Burma front, and...
Designed in a great rush at the end of 1917 just in time to take part in the German standard figh...
This follow-up to 'Bloody April 1917' looks closely at a month of comparable adversity as faced b...
The Royal Aircraft Factory SE 5 5a was, along with the Sopwith Camel, the major British fighting ...
Undoubtedly the most famous fighter type to see service on either side during World War 1, the Fo...
The French Nieuport company provided the Allied air forces with the first true fighter scout of W...
Keen First World War aviation enthusiasts will be familiar with Norman Franks' previous books cov...
Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few Seventy-five years on ...