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Three Books For The Truly Fearless Frequent Flier

For fearful flyers, a flight can be a white-knuckled ride.
istockphoto
For fearful flyers, a flight can be a white-knuckled ride.

I spend a lot of time at 35,000 feet, and while I am not by any stretch a white-knuckle flier, I am the sort who counts the number of seats between me and an exit row before we take off. As the old joke goes, I'm not afraid of flying; it's crashing I fear. And yet, I have a fascination with airborne fender-benders. It's that part of us that's drawn to disaster movies and stories of serial killers. Why do we love the Titanic? Because it sinks.

Just this summer, I was on a jet when lightning flashed (the flight attendant near me shrieked when the windows on the left side of the cabin went white). Here are three books I actually read while five miles off the ground that featured the worst that can happen in the sky. Even though they forced me to face my fears, I loved every moment I spent with them.

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Three Books for the Truly Fearless Frequent Flyer

Fly by Wire

by William Langewiesche

Journalist William Langewiesche has built a career sharing with us the stories behind the stories — from ground zero to the outlaw seas. His most recent book, Fly by Wire, chronicles Captain "Sully" Sullenberger's January 2009 ditching of an Airbus in Hudson River. He focuses on the role that the plane's technology may have played in the remarkable water landing. But what is especially riveting are his stories of the accidents that did not end so well, and the pathos that most likely occurred on the flight decks of the doomed airliners.

The Blasphemer: A Novel

by Nigel Farndale

Nigel Farndale's The Blasphemer is a tale of an adamant atheist and his great-grandfather, a World War I deserter, but the novel hinges on a small aircraft that ditches near the Galapagos Islands. While Langewiesche spends his time on the flight deck, Farndale brings the reader back into the passenger cabin, where the panic and utter helplessness are palpable. I remember the way I opened my window blind when the fictional plane experiences its first violent jolt. Just like the fellow in the novel, I gazed back at the engine on my side of the aircraft and studied the wing.

High and the Mighty

by Ernest K. Gann

Finally, years ago I unearthed an copy of Ernest K. Gann's 1953 opus, The High and the Mighty, and brought it with me on a book tour. My mother, I recalled, had loved the novel, even though she viewed flying as only slightly dumber than celebrity bullfighting. Well, I savored it, too. It's an absolute page-turner as the pilots try to coax a crippled airliner across the Pacific. It was also great fun to watch the passengers around me stare at what I was reading, a little aghast because on some level they understood that this book was the mother of all airplane disaster books and movies.

I guess there's a term for this: Plane Porn.

Chris Bohjalian