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Flight of the Gin Fizz: Midlife at 4,500 Feet |
List Price: $25.00
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Reviews |
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Rating:  Summary: An excellent book for anyone thinking about learning to fly. Review: Although Henry Kisor writes about his transcontinental trip in a small trainer as a non-hearing pilot, there is a subtext. Anyone of any age who wonders what the world of general aviation is all about and harbors the desire to join its ranks should read this book. Sure, Henry's deafness makes his flight special, but it is his description of grass-roots aviation that makes this book a keeper. You won't recognize John Nance, Dale Brown, or Tom Clancy in its pages--not even Richard Bach--just a middle-aged guy in love with flying.
Rating:  Summary: A Different Twist on Middle Age Angst Review: Faced with late middle age and a life that has not quite provided all that youth expected, any number of males have taken to the open road and written about it -- most often, to my way of thinking, in a fairly whiny manner. This is a different twist on that theme; Kisor, a critic for a Chicago newspaper, doesn't take to the open road, he takes to the open sky in a small Cessna. And not just any open sky; it is the open sky which the nearly forgotten Cal Rodgers followed in the first solo flight across the United States. Coincidentally, Kisor and Rodgers share the handicap of being deaf. This all makes for a leisurely and instructive read on flying, on living deaf in a hearing world, and -- gently -- on growing older and finding the new satisfactions rather than the disappointments of that fact. Kisor's writing is not particularly gripping and his journey is mostly uneventful. Rodgers' trip was much different, plagued by all manner of equipment and crash problems, some of them triggered by his own aggressive and overconfident actions. Kisor's episodic retelling of that journey, based on an unpublished work by a woman he meets along his own route, is the best part of Flight.
Rating:  Summary: Flying low and slow gives the best views Review: I enjoyed this book so much, I took my time reading it. As the author crossed the country slowly in a Cessna 152, he follows the path of Cal Rodgers (another deaf pilot) - and I followed the author slowly, limiting myself to a few chapters at a time, savoring them. While the author shared his observations about the places he went and the people he met, he also shared his his views as a deaf pilot and a deaf member of our society. It is this perspective that gives the greatest insights. He keeps running into people who "can't do something" because they are different. Women pilots, black pilots, pilots who are afraid of flying, deaf pilots. Fortunately, none of them listened (pun intended) to "them" and some great little stories about some fascinating individuals come out. I must confess I might have tried to limit some of these folks before I read this book - I hope this book has taught me to encourage them instead. I limited myself to four stars because this flight of self-discovery isn't quite in the league of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, but that's a high bar to meet.
Rating:  Summary: Flying low and slow gives the best views Review: I enjoyed this book so much, I took my time reading it. As the author crossed the country slowly in a Cessna 152, he follows the path of Cal Rodgers (another deaf pilot) - and I followed the author slowly, limiting myself to a few chapters at a time, savoring them. While the author shared his observations about the places he went and the people he met, he also shared his his views as a deaf pilot and a deaf member of our society. It is this perspective that gives the greatest insights. He keeps running into people who "can't do something" because they are different. Women pilots, black pilots, pilots who are afraid of flying, deaf pilots. Fortunately, none of them listened (pun intended) to "them" and some great little stories about some fascinating individuals come out. I must confess I might have tried to limit some of these folks before I read this book - I hope this book has taught me to encourage them instead. I limited myself to four stars because this flight of self-discovery isn't quite in the league of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, but that's a high bar to meet.
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