Flying the Sturmovik in Action on the Eastern Front 1942-45
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During the 1930s the Soviet Union launched a major effort to create a modern Air Force. That process required training tens of thousands of pilots. Among those pilots were larger numbers of young women, training shoulder to shoulder with their male counterparts. A common training program of the day involved studying in 'flying clubs' during leisure hours, first using gliders and then training planes. Following this, the best graduates could enter military schools to become professional combat pilots or flight navigators. The author of this book passed through all of those stages and had become an experienced training pilot when the USSR entered the war. Volunteering for frontline duty, the author flew 130 combat missions piloting the U2 biplane in a liaison squadron. In the initial period of the war, the German Luftwaffe dominated the sky. Daily combat sorties demanded bravery and skill from the pilots of the liaison squadron operating obsolete, unarmed planes. Over the course of a year the author was shot down by German fighters three times but kept flying nevertheless. In late 1942 Anna Egorova became the first female pilot to fly the famous Sturmovik (ground attack) plane that played a major role in the ground battles of the Eastern Front. Earning the respect of her fellow male pilots, the author became not just a mature combat pilot, but a commanding officer. Over the course of two years the author advanced from ordinary pilot to the executive officer of the Squadron, and then was appointed Regimental navigator, in the process flying approximately 270 combat missions over the southern sector of the Eastern Front initially (Taman, the Crimea) before switching to the 1st Belorussian Front, and seeing action over White Russia and Poland. Flying on a mission over Poland in 1944 the author was shot down over a target by German flak. Severely burned, she was taken prisoner. After surviving in a German POW camp for 5 months, she was liberated by Soviet troops. After experiencing numerous humiliations as an 'ex-POW' in 1965 the author finally received a top military award, a long-delayed 'Golden Star' with the honorary title of 'Hero of the Soviet Union'. This is a quite unique story of courage, determination and bravery in the face of tremendous personal adversity. The many obstacles Anna had to cross before she could fly first the Po-2, then the Sturmovik, are recounted in detail, including her tough work helping to build the Moscow Metro before the outbreak of war. Above all, Over Fields of Fire is a very human story - sometimes sad, sometimes angry, filled with hope, at other times with near-despair, abundant in comradeship and professionalism – and never less than a large dose of determination!
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In itself, it could have been a very good memoirs - the human side is honest and engaging.
Unfortunately, the book is slightly dragged down by the fact the author is not an intelligent person (naive at best, way less than smart most probably) and greatly dragged down by the strong propaganda content and approach, by the several episodes completely lacking believability (obvious and technically ridiculous lies, such as an already damaged ground attack plane shooting down 4 enemy dedicated fighters, alone, or 2 crappy I16 going against 6 much more modern Me109 and winning the fight, and more in this vein) and the typical hateful Russian schizophrenia: when a Russian shoots down Germans, great hero, amazing brave, what a guy and so on; when the enemy shoots down Russians, they are always "scum, vultures, jackals".
The enemy is also never Germans (or Romanians, Italians and so on) they are always all fully "Hitlerites, Fascists", and of course plenty of "scum", "crawling" and so on. Among those scum were my grandfather (returned, but fucked up) and grandmother's brother (KIA) and they never called the Russian enemy anything else than soldiers or humans, even in private talks, just like many other ww2 (Romanian, so Axis) veterans i read or spoke to, including ground attack pilots (so the exact same thing as Egorova, minus the blind hatred). They actually pitied those they bombed, while this author always and strongly enjoys it.
Overall, a potentially good book brought down by propaganda, ridiculous "hunter's stories" and blind hatred.