Yep...
Richard Bach was an ANG Pilot in the 1960s. Stranger to the Ground was written in relationship to a courier-mission flown in Europe in an F-84. His writing style is totally unique... puts you in the cockpit with him... while his mind is both 'focused' and 'drifting'. After reading this book in the early 1970s... I fell in love with flying... I knew what I was experiencing on a small scale... what he was writing-about on a broader scale... and helped me understand my 'USAF-pilot-dad'. Flight is wonderous!
NOTE1. I think Richard Bach's ANG unit was tasked to fly combat in Vietnam early in the war... but HE refused 'to go' and was removed from service [BCD?].
Here is a favorite excerpt from STRANGER TO THE GROUND – Richard Bach
Tonight I, who love my airplane with all its moods and hardships and joys, am looking upon the stars. And tonight, 20-minutes to the east, there is another pilot, another man who loves his airplane, looking out at these same stars. These symbols.
My airplane is painted with a white star, his with a red star. It is dark, and paint is hard to see. In his cockpit is the same family of flight instruments and engine instruments and radio control panels that is in my cockpit. In his airplane as in mine, when the stick is pressed to the left, the airplane banks to the left.
I know unquestioningly, that I would like the man in that cockpit. We could talk through the long night of the airplanes that we have known and the times we were afraid and the places that we have been. We would laugh over the half-witted things that we did when we were new in the air. We have shared many things, he and I, too many things to be ordered into our airplanes to kill each other.
I went through flying training at a base near Dallas, he went through it at a base near Stalingrad. My flight instructor shouted at me in English, his at him in Russian. But the blue fire trickles once in a while across his windscreen as it does mine and ice builds and breaks over his wing as it does mine. And somewhere in his cockpit is a control panel or circuit breaker panel or a single switch that he has almost to stands on his head to reach.
Perhaps at this moment his daughter is considering whether, or not, to accept a pair of Siamese kittens. Look out for Your curtains, friend. I wish I could warn him about the kittens.
Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible. [variation, Stuart Chase]
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion", HBA forum]
o Only fools and charlatans know everything and understand everything." -Anton Chekhov