First-person accounts
Alsop, Joseph. I've Seen the Best of It. New York: Norton, 1992. Memoir by the man who served as Chennault's secretary while the AVG was training in Burma and again during the 14th AF days in China.Bacon, Noel. "Diary of a Flying Tiger." New York Sunday News, 2 Aug 1942. His wartime diary, probably slightly edited; the nearest thing we have to a contemporaneous account.
Baisden, Chuck. Flying Tiger to Air Commando. Mustang International, 1994; Schiffer Military Books, 1998. Baisden was an AVG armorer. Available at Historic Aviation.
Bishop, Lewis, & Shiela Irwin.
Escape From Hell: An AVG Flying Tiger's Journey.
Tigers Eye Press, 2005. First part of the book is Lew Bishop's account
of his captivity and escape; his daughter has added background material
on Bishop and the AVG. Available at Amazon.
Boyington, Gregory. Baa
Baa Black Sheep. New York: Putnam, 1958.
Very entertaining. Written long after the fact and to be taken with a
grain of salt. Good on local color. Available at Amazon.
Bright, J. Gilpin. "From a Flying Tiger." Atlantic, October 1942.
Gil Bright's letters home as published soon after they were written.
Chennault, Claire. Way
of a Fighter. New York:
Putnam, 1949. His autobiography, written by Robert Hotz without close
supervision from Chennault. Available at Amazon.
Columbia University, Oral History Research Office. "The reminiscences
of the Flying Tigers." NYC: Oral History Research Office, Columbia
University, 1965 (1962?). Transcripts of interviews by Frank Rounds Jr,
on file at National Air and Space Museum Library, Washington DC.
Cotton, M.C. ("Bush"). Hurricanes Over Burma. London:
Grub Street, 1999. He flew alongside the AVG at Rangoon.
Cross, James. "We Kept the Tigers Flying." Mechanix Illustrated,
Dec 1942.
Curie, Eve. Journey Among Warriorers. Garden City NY:
Doubleday, Doran 1943. French reporter in Burma.
Dumas, Jim. Longburst and the Flying Tigers. Tollhouse CA:
Scrub Jay Press, 2004.
Entertaining account by an army pilot attached to the AVG in June 1942.
Everard, Hedley. A Mouse in My Pocket: Memoirs of a Fighter
Pilot. Picton, Ontario: privately printed, no date. Everard was
a Canadian pilot in RAF 17 Squadron, who claimed to have sold some of
his victories to the AVG.
Frances, Neil. Ketchil: A New Zealand Pilot's War in Asia and
the Pacific. Masterton: Wairarapa Archive, 2005. Extensive quotes
from Vic Bargh, a Buffalo pilot in 67 Squadron
at Rangoon. Available from the Nile
bookstore in New Zealand.
Frillmann, Paul. China: The Remembered Life. Boston: Houghton-
Mifflin, 1968. Interesting memoir by the AVG chaplain.
Glover, Byron.
"Assembling and Testing P-40's in Burma." Aviation, Dec 1942.
Online at the Annals of the Flying Tigers
Greenlaw, Olga. The Lady and the Tigers. New York: Dutton, 1943.
Wonderful memoir by Chennault's secretary and the first keeper of the
AVG war diary. Accurate as to day-to-day events.
---; edited by Daniel Ford.
The Lady and the Tigers: Remembering the Flying Tigers of World War II.
Omaha: iUniverse, 2002. An abridged and annotated edition,
with new material on the Greenlaws before and after their AVG tour.
Helsdon Thomas, J. Wings Over Burma. London: Merlin, 1984. Memoir by
a "fitter" with RAF 67 Squadron in Burma.
Hemingway, Kenneth. Wings Over Burma. London: Quality, 1944.
Interesting memoir by a Hurricane pilot who flew alongside the
AVG. (Not an error: Hemingway and Helsdon used the same title for
their books.)
Hill, David Lee, and
Reagan Schaupp. Tex Hill: Flying Tiger.
Privately printed, 2003. Available from
Historic Aviation. Reviewed on the
Annals
of the Flying Tigers.
Howard, James. Roar of the Tiger. Orion, 1991. Nicely written
memoir by an AVG ace who later won the Medal of Honor as a Mustang pilot
in Europe.
Kato Tateo. "Diary of Major-General Kato." Japan Times &
Advertiser, 25 Jul 1942. Kato commanded the 64th Sentai. Edited
for publication to celebrate his elevation to "war god."
Laughlin, C. H ("Link"). "China Tiger." Foundation, Spring 1983.
Leonard, Royal. I Flew for China. Garden City NY: Doubleday, Doran, 1942.
Leonard was Chiang's pilot and scheduled to lead the 2nd AVG to Asia.
Losonsky, Frank, & Terry Losonsky.
Flying Tiger: A Crew Chief's Story. Schiffer Military Books, 1996. 110 pp, 200
photos, $35. Available at Historic Aviation.
Moore, Larry, & Ken Sanger. "We Fight With the Flying Tigers."
Cosmopolitan, Aug-Sep 1942. These guys were partly responsible
for the John Wayne epic about the Flying Tigers.
Neumann, Gerhard.
Herman the German. New York: Morrow, 1984.
Memoir by the enemy alien who became an AVG mechanic. Reprint available
at Amazon.
Pentecost, Walter. "Advance of the Flying Tigers." American
Aviation Historical Society Journal, Summer 1970. Good detail of
the assembly of the AVG Tomahawks.
Pentecost, Walter, as told to Alan Hynd. "Here Come The Flying Tigers!"
Liberty, 25 Jul 1942; 1 Aug 1942; 8 Aug 1942. Mostly "as told
to", which equates to ghost-written. Pentecost wasn't in Rangoon during
most of the combat he describes so vividly.
Rangoon Times. Various issues, 1941-42
Rodewald, Don. Tiger Tenacity. Lake City CO: Granite Falls, 2000. From AVG crewman
to jet pilot to first paraplegic to fly around the world.
Rosbert, C. Joseph. Flying Tiger Joe's Adventure Story Cookbook.
Franklin: Poplar, 1985.
Scott, Robert Lee. Flying Tiger. Garden City: Doubleday, 1959.
(General Scott is hugely admired, but his books are self-serving and
often contradict one another--and the record--on details)
Seagrave, Gordon. Burma Surgeon. New York: Norton, 1943.
Schramm, Leo. Leo the Tiger: True Stories About the Flying Tigers
From World War II. Camp Hill PA: Green Shields, 1998.
Shilling, Erik. Destiny: A Flying Tiger's Rendezvous With Fate
Bond, Charles. A
Flying Tiger's Diary. Texas A&M Univ. Press, 1984. Excellent. Probably edited for publication.
Available at Amazon and at
Historic Aviation.
---. "The Transition." Air Classics, March 1989.
---.
God Is My Co-Pilot.
New York: Ballentine, 1956
Reprint edition available at Historic Aviation.
---. The Day I Owned the Sky. New York: Bantam, 1988.
---. Commentary on the Tomahawk pilot's manual
(I sent Erik a copy of the British manual for the Tomahawk, which he
annotated to point out differences between the versions supplied to
the RAF and to the AVG.)
---. Postings, Usenet newsgroup rec.aviation.military,
1992-2002. Erik was contentious, sometimes wrong (in my judgment),
and always interesting. He also had a remarkable memory for detail.
I've posted some of his recollections, with his permission, on the
Annals of the Flying Tigers:
* "AVG Flying Tigers combat tactics"
* "Curtiss P-40 spin characteristics vs. P-36"
* "Dogfight: Brewster Buffalo v. P-40"
Smith, Robert M. With Chennault in China: A Flying Tiger's Story. Blue Ridge Summit: Tab, 1988. Diary of an AVG radioman. Many good photos. Reprinted 1997 by Schiffer Military Books, $29.95. Available at Historic Aviation.
Smith, Robert T. Tale of a Tiger.
Van Nuys: privately printed, 1986. A facsimile of an AVG pilot's diary--great stuff!
Available from his family.
Stowe, Leland. They Shall Not Sleep. New York: Knopf, 1944. An American reporter who covered the fall of Burma and wrote about the AVG.
Upfill, Muriel Sue. An American in Burma, 1930 to 1942. Tempe: Arizona State Univ. Program for Southeast Asian Studies, 1999. Upfill was in Rangoon until February 1942, and in India worked for the AVG supply office.
Wolf, Fritz, & Douglas Ingells. "It's Hell Over China!" Air Trails
Pictorial, Oct 1942.
---. "The Truth About the Zero." Air Progress, Jan 1943.
Wolf notes that "The Zeros we were fighting over
China didn't have any cannon. This led us to believe that they were
army fighters, and not navy planes." This during WWII! It was another
45 years before R. T. Smith illustrated his Tale of a Tiger
with a drawing of a Nakajima Ki-43, the first Flying Tiger vet to let
go of the Zero myth.
Wright, Peter. "I Learned About Flying From That." Flying, May
1944.
---. "A Fighter Pilot Learns a Lesson." Sportsman Pilot,
Mid-May 1943.


Autographed photo
P-40B kit