Campbell Muirhead kept a meticulous diary of his wartime RAF service from the day that he set forth to train as a pilot in Canada and the USA in 1942 to the end of his wartime service with 12 Squadron Bomber Command. He was unable to pass the flying course and decided to retrain as a bomber because he wished to become operational as soon as possible. The book is particularly emotive as he wrote in the common parlance of those wartime days and truly reflects the emotions, fears and feelings of those caught up in that mighty conflict. His diligent observations of life in the RAF from joining-up, crossing the Atlantic, training in the New World bring back wartime life as it really was. His descriptions of the perils of flying on bombing raids deep into the heart of Germany truly reflect the many different aspects of life in a front-line squadron in a way that can only be told by one who was there. AUTHOR: Campbell Muirhead joined the Civil Service after leaving the RAF and lived for 30 years in Duddington village in Edinburgh. He retired and moved to Swinton, a village in the Scottish Borders and explored Britain in a caravan. He died in 1993 SELLING POINTS: * Truly captures wartime emotions * Vivid descriptions of the fears and life of an RAF aircrew ILLUSTRATIONS 8 mono illustrations