Inside the Sky: A Meditation on Flight

Front Cover
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, Jun 29, 1999 - Transportation - 256 pages
William Langewiesche's life has been deeply intertwined with the idea and act of flying.  Fifty years ago his father, a test pilot, wrote Stick and Rudder, a text still considered by many to be the bible of aerial navigation.  Langewiesche himself learned to fly while still a child.  Now he shares his pilot's-eye view of flight with those of us who take flight for granted--exploring the inner world of a sky that remains as exotic and revealing as the most foreign destination.

Langewiesche tells us how flight happens--what the pilot sees, thinks, and feels.  His description is not merely about speed and conquest.  It takes the form of a deliberate climb, leading at low altitude first over a new view of a home, and then higher, into the solitude of the cockpit, through violent storms and ocean nights, and on to unexpected places in the mind.

In Langewiesche's hands it becomes clear, at the close of this first century of flight, how profoundly our vision has been altered by our liberation from the ground.  And we understand how, when we look around, we may find ourselves reflected in the grace and turbulence of a human sky.
 

Contents

The View from Above
3
The Strangers Path
27
The Turn
56
On a Bombay Night
93
Inside an Angry Sky
114
Slam and Jam
156
Valujet 592
190
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1999)

William Langewiesche is a correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly.  A professional pilot for many years, he is the author of Cutting for Sign and Sahara Unveiled (both available from Vintage Books). He lives in California.

Bibliographic information