Dam Buster: Barnes Wallis, the Lost Visionary of British Aviation

Author:   Richard Morris
Publisher:   Orion Publishing Co
ISBN:  

9781474623438


Pages:   528
Publication Date:   09 May 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Dam Buster: Barnes Wallis, the Lost Visionary of British Aviation


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Full Product Details

Author:   Richard Morris
Publisher:   Orion Publishing Co
Imprint:   Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Dimensions:   Width: 13.00cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 19.60cm
Weight:   0.420kg
ISBN:  

9781474623438


ISBN 10:   1474623433
Pages:   528
Publication Date:   09 May 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Reviews

A stunningly good and surely definitive biography of one of the most fascinating British engineers ever to have lived. Morris skilfully picks through the myths, the legend, and the ever-evolving narrative to put flesh back onto the bones of an unquestionably brilliant, but also highly complex, figure. The time-span of Barnes Wallis's career, which cut through the heart of the 20th century, including two world wars and into the Cold War, was remarkable, and Morris not only paints an astonishingly vivid portrait of the man, but also of the time through which he lived. * James Holland, author of BROTHERS IN ARMS * A comprehensive, deeply researched and insightful portrait of Wallis, one of Britain's greatest engineers -- Saul David * Daily Telegraph * Fascinating . . . Wallis was in the unenviable position of being one of Britain's most talented engineers who was nevertheless under-appreciated in his lifetime . . . [Morris] does a sterling job of re-establishing his reputation as an innovator in countless fields, in highly readable fashion -- Alexander Larman * The Observer * Despite his fame, little was known about the man and Morris, author of a biography of Guy Gibson, tells the fascinating untold story of Barnes Wallis * Royal Air Force News * A thorough and dutiful account of the designer's journey from airship to spaceship. Morris puts emotional clothes on the man himself, chronicling Wallis's enduring and loving relationship with his wife, Molly . . . the book fleshes out Wallis, revealing his vulnerability . . . What comes through in Morris's book is the unevenness of his legacy * The Times * The definitive full-length life of Wallis . . . a genuinely gripping narrative . . . Richard Morris has brought his subject to life with considerable skill . . . a biography that anyone with an interest in Britain's military engineering past will read with profit * The Past * Richard Morris's riveting biography of Barnes Wallis . . . characterises Wallis as a flawed yet indomitable genius . . . it is a probing yet thoughtful account of the brilliant mind behind that raid and many other aeronautical feats -- Victoria Taylor * BBC HISTORY MAGAZINE * Richard Morris's biography is the best and most detailed to date of the celebrated engineer Barnes Wallis -- Waqar Zaidi * TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT *


A stunningly good and surely definitive biography of one of the most fascinating British engineers ever to have lived. Morris skilfully picks through the myths, the legend, and the ever-evolving narrative to put flesh back onto the bones of an unquestionably brilliant, but also highly complex, figure. The time-span of Barnes Wallis's career, which cut through the heart of the 20th century, including two world wars and into the Cold War, was remarkable, and Morris not only paints an astonishingly vivid portrait of the man, but also of the time through which he lived. * James Holland, author of BROTHERS IN ARMS * A comprehensive, deeply researched and insightful portrait of Wallis, one of Britain's greatest engineers -- Saul David * Daily Telegraph * Fascinating . . . Wallis was in the unenviable position of being one of Britain's most talented engineers who was nevertheless under-appreciated in his lifetime . . . [Morris] does a sterling job of re-establishing his reputation as an innovator in countless fields, in highly readable fashion -- Alexander Larman * The Observer * Despite his fame, little was known about the man and Morris, author of a biography of Guy Gibson, tells the fascinating untold story of Barnes Wallis * Royal Air Force News * A thorough and dutiful account of the designer's journey from airship to spaceship. Morris puts emotional clothes on the man himself, chronicling Wallis's enduring and loving relationship with his wife, Molly . . . the book fleshes out Wallis, revealing his vulnerability . . . What comes through in Morris's book is the unevenness of his legacy * The Times * The definitive full-length life of Wallis . . . a genuinely gripping narrative . . . Richard Morris has brought his subject to life with considerable skill . . . a biography that anyone with an interest in Britain's military engineering past will read with profit * The Past * Richard Morris's riveting biography of Barnes Wallis . . . characterises Wallis as a flawed yet indomitable genius . . . it is a probing yet thoughtful account of the brilliant mind behind that raid and many other aeronautical feats -- Victoria Taylor * BBC HISTORY MAGAZINE * Richard Morris's biography is the best and most detailed to date of the celebrated engineer Barnes Wallis -- Waqar Zaidi * TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT * A superb book ... beautifully written ... for an account of a major name in British aviation history this is, I would suggest, as good as it can get. It is a superb read and I highly recommend it to anybody interested in aviation -- Tony Buttler, AMRAeS * Aerospace magazine, Royal Aeronautical Society *


A stunningly good and surely definitive biography of one of the most fascinating British engineers ever to have lived. Morris skilfully picks through the myths, the legend, and the ever-evolving narrative to put flesh back onto the bones of an unquestionably brilliant, but also highly complex, figure. The time-span of Barnes Wallis's career, which cut through the heart of the 20th century, including two world wars and into the Cold War, was remarkable, and Morris not only paints an astonishingly vivid portrait of the man, but also of the time through which he lived. * James Holland, author of BROTHERS IN ARMS * A comprehensive, deeply researched and insightful portrait of Wallis, one of Britain's greatest engineers -- Saul David * Daily Telegraph * Fascinating . . . Wallis was in the unenviable position of being one of Britain's most talented engineers who was nevertheless under-appreciated in his lifetime . . . [Morris] does a sterling job of re-establishing his reputation as an innovator in countless fields, in highly readable fashion -- Alexander Larman * The Observer * Despite his fame, little was known about the man and Morris, author of a biography of Guy Gibson, tells the fascinating untold story of Barnes Wallis * Royal Air Force News * A thorough and dutiful account of the designer's journey from airship to spaceship. Morris puts emotional clothes on the man himself, chronicling Wallis's enduring and loving relationship with his wife, Molly . . . the book fleshes out Wallis, revealing his vulnerability . . . What comes through in Morris's book is the unevenness of his legacy * The Times * The definitive full-length life of Wallis . . . a genuinely gripping narrative . . . Richard Morris has brought his subject to life with considerable skill . . . a biography that anyone with an interest in Britain's military engineering past will read with profit * The Past * Richard Morris's riveting biography of Barnes Wallis . . . characterises Wallis as a flawed yet indomitable genius . . . it is a probing yet thoughtful account of the brilliant mind behind that raid and many other aeronautical feats -- Victoria Taylor * BBC HISTORY MAGAZINE *


Author Information

Richard Morris (b. 1947) is an archaeologist and historian. He grew up in north Worcestershire and began his career working on excavations under York Minster. Among the themes in his writing are buildings and belief (Churches in the Landscape (1998); Evensong (2021)), place, identity and cultural memory (Time's Anvil (2013); Yorkshire (2018)), and aviation and its people. Dam Buster joins two earlier biographies - Guy Gibson (1994) and Cheshire: the Biography of Leonard Cheshire VC (2000) - which connect in the world of flight and the deeds of No. 617 Squadron RAF.

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