Rajay,
Top pics for me are a bit off the standard, but I discovered jets a while back and feel it is high time to record what is a disappearing trade...the fighter pilot!
My favorite books top 4...
"A Tradition of Excellence". By Snowbird Leader Dan Dempsey. This is an awesome achievement, a self published volume of complete scope and incredible research. He made the sacrifice to put it all down and then the strength to bet on it selling. This book will be a collectible someday. The largest Canadian Aviation book at 650 pages, and only 1000 copies were made. Simply incredible, great text, huge format, research and historical import from the horse's mouth. Oh. And you buy them from Dan.
"Yukon Wings", Bob Cameron. Again another Canadian who put the whole history down of flying the Yukon, with unbelievable photographs that come from a life of love for the subject. For those that aspire to writing books, as all of us should, so the knowledge is not lost, this is another great achievement. An important book from the best source in the subject.
"Mustang, the Racing Thoroughbred". The best book on racing the Mustang, and something that should be required reading before you attend Reno. Well done and accurate.
"The F-51 in Lating American Air Force Service" Hagedorn. Any Hagedorn book is a good and essential buy as a reference work. I used this one so much I bought another one to have a pristine copy. To understand the Mustang of today, required for the shelf. Rare and expensive for a small book.
In another group for ranking purposes....but great reading for the right reasons. Reading not research. Generally these books favor being written by pilots, and show their passion and culture accurately.
"Crusader" Paul Gilchrist. All pilot recollections, no technical data and no other garbage. Also "Vultures Row" by the same author, a career Naval Aviator who knows the story and tells it like it was, and is.
"Eagle Engaged". The F-15 story. Doug Dildy, an excellent book on the best fighter ever by an Eagle pilot who knows, from back in the day when it was something. It still is.
"Red Eagles" and "America's Secret Mig Squadron, Constant Peg". Both excellent sources of an amazing time in the USAF. Also these books are written from the opposing point of view on the same subject. Great reading and essential together in my opinion. Unfortunately there needs to be another picture book on the subject.
For Warbird pictures "Chino, Warbird Treasures Past and Present". Joe Cupido. Amazing pics of the Warbird Center of the world back in the day.
"Spitfire, the History". Shakalady. Boring listing of every Spitfire type and modification. Every airframe. All the mods. The whole history in tiny print. Boring. Yet I use it a lot and find it utterly essential for research beginnings over the years. Why can't every significant type have a person that puts it ALL down. Perhaps the achievement of the author in getting these things published when they won't sell to the masses means something.
"Spitfires and Polished Metal". Essential to understand restorations as they were done in the 90's. Well illustrated and excellent text, a very well done little seen book on Warbird stuff for enthusiasts.
John Dibbs books...biased I suppose, but the best Warbird photographer in my opinion, for the coffee table.
Eric Presten's Vintage Wings, 1, 2, and 3. Incredible care and detail and finely vetted photographs make Antique Aviation come alive. Any one of them.
Two books not out yet that I want to buy...signed copies!
Rajay's forthcoming book on the Grumman Goose....
Randy Haskin's forthcoming book on the Mustang....
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