Author: Ray Deacon
Published: Pen & Sword
ISBN: 9781526721464
Bookshelf Browse by Geoff Coughlin (February 2020)
Get this very readable and impressive title here now at Pen & Sword Books
372 pages, soft back, 250 illustrations including colour and black and white photographs
Geoff C.
Take a good look inside with me here…
Here’s some additional information from the publisher…
Having passed-out from Boy Entrant training in December 1959, Ray spent the following two years servicing Vampire trainers at the Central Flying School (CFS), RAF Little Rissington. In April 1962, Ray left Little Rissington and joined thirty fellow airmen for a voyage out to Aden aboard HMT Nevasa on her last sailing as a troopship. Posted to 8 Squadron at RAF Khormaksar, he spent the next two years living and working in the torrid heat of this desert outpost. It had its compensations, however; not only the opportunity to experience life on a busy frontline operational squadron while working on ground attack and fighter reconnaissance versions of the Hawker Hunter, but also the chance to savour the delights of a trip in Sydney Camm’s most versatile aircraft.
In addition to defending the skies above Aden and its Protectorates, Middle East Command expended a large proportion of its energy supporting army activities in the mountains of the Aden hinterland; dropping supplies, transporting personnel between posts, and in the case of the Hunter squadrons, attacking dissident targets and patrolling the border with Yemen.
It was against this background that Ray wrote his first book on RAF Middle East Command operations, Hunters over Arabia (Pen & Sword Aviation, 2018). Concentrating on the activities of the Command’s strike force, it is based on official records produced at the time and since held at the National Archives in Kew. Tales from the Front Line: Middle East Hunters is a fully illustrated companion volume that comprises anecdotes, stories and experiences of life on the Hunter squadrons as told by the pilots and airmen who flew and maintained the Hunter during its twelve-year tenure in Arabia.
PIC 3