Airplane-related fiction
So I'm looking for some good airplane-related fiction to read. Books whose story really revolve around the airplane itself...not travel stories.
I've read "Airframe" by Michael Crichton (good) and "High Wire" by Kam Majd (not so good). Any other recommendations? (trains and boats would also be good, I guess.) Thanks. |
"No Highway" by Nevil Shute.
"Down to a Sunless Sea" by David Graham. "Airport" by Arthur Hailey. "Phoenix Rising" by John Nance. |
Nice topic! I devoured "Night over Water" by Ken Follett. Great read.
http://www.amazon.com/Night-Over-Wat.../dp/0451173139 See link for summary and reviews. |
Second vote for "Down to a Sunless Sea".....
The "797" is a pretty central character in the story...;) |
Originally Posted by tfar
(Post 12937664)
Nice topic! I devoured "Night over Water" by Ken Follett. Great read.
http://www.amazon.com/Night-Over-Wat.../dp/0451173139 See link for summary and reviews. |
Originally Posted by underpressure
(Post 12937954)
Second resounding vote for Night over water.
Follet always tells a good story and this involves the PanAm Clipper, a special age in flying. |
Originally Posted by underpressure
(Post 12937954)
Second resounding vote for Night over water.
Originally Posted by Platcomike
(Post 12938139)
And a third. It has now been ported to the Kindle for your convenience.
Follet always tells a good story and this involves the PanAm Clipper, a special age in flying. Till |
Sole Survivor by Dean Koontz. Although the plane isn't the central "character," it is critical to the story line, at least until it crashes.
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"Fearless".
Although not strictly about airplanes, a plane crash is the central event in the book. The movie is outstanding as well and is always on my top ten list. |
Originally Posted by tfar
(Post 12939103)
I am honored but not surprised you liked that, too. I might well read it again because luckily I don't remember how the story ends, so the suspense should still be there the second time. It would be a very nice story for a movie. Like someone on Amazon said, it's like the Orient Express in a plane. Which brings us to Agatha Christie, of course, and fulfills the train and boat story requirements.
I remember reading a Dick Francis mystery involving a character who couriered horses on international flights, but can't think of the title of it. |
Originally Posted by mhnadel
(Post 12940413)
I remember reading a Dick Francis mystery involving a character who couriered horses on international flights, but can't think of the title of it.
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Originally Posted by mhnadel
(Post 12940413)
Christie also wrote Death in the Air, an Hercule Poirot mystery set on an airplane.
I remember reading a Dick Francis mystery involving a character who couriered horses on international flights, but can't think of the title of it. TIll |
Not fiction (and certainly no literary masterpiece), but highly suggest 747... by Joe Sutter. Gave me a whole new appreciation for all of the corporate BS that he had to go through to get the 747 off the ground (e.g., Boeing's best engineers were allocated to an SST project, Pan Am sent Charles Lindbergh to do some mystery shopping). After all, life imitates fiction . . . ;)
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Small Worlds by David Lodge (Penguin paperback). It's an academic novel, about travel (plane) to Australia for a conference.
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Mayday - co-written by Thomas Block and Nelson DeMille. Thomas Block was a pilot for US airways, and wrote the "Flying the Line" monthly column in Flying magazine for many years.
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