Apache
By (Author) Ed Macy
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPerennial
10th September 2009
30th April 2009
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Military history: post-WW2 conflicts
Modern warfare
958.1047092
Paperback
400
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 25mm
300g
An astonishing first book, Apache is a story of courage, comradeship, technology and tragedy, during the ongoing war in Afghanistan.
Apache is the first book to come from the cockpit of the most sophisticated fighting helicopter the world has ever known. Designed in the mid 1980s to take on the Soviets, these machines have proven themselves as the perfect tool for combat in Afghanistan the Apache is the helicopter Prince Harry pilots as a captain of the Army Air Corps.
Ed Macy's account of the incredibly hard Apache selection process, tougher than that of the SAS, combined with his description of the sheer difficulty of flying one of these helicopters, provides a fascinating insight into the relationship between man and machine fighting in the toughest conditions imaginable.
The climactic build-up to the rescue mission at Jugroom Fort is both dramatic and deeply moving. The rescue of Lance Corporal Mathew Ford has been hailed as one of the most remarkable and daring rescues of modern wartime and Ed's bravery on the ground at Jugroom Fort led to him being awarded the Military Cross one of the first in the Army Air Corps' history.
Taking the reader right to the heart of the war in Afghanistan, Apache offers an unprecedented degree of proximity to the action and horror that troops in the region are faced with on a daily basis. Gripping from the first page to the last, it is utterly compelling and impossible to put down.
Puts you right in the cockpit with your finger on the trigger. A truly awesome read; and a climax that Hollywood couldnt invent. Andy McNab
Books like this remind you that soldiers truly are a breed apart. Guardian
'An honest account of exceptional bravery. Ross Kemp
'Macy is the real deal. Nobody could write that powerfully about combat, or emotionally about the men fighting with him, unless he has been at the gunship's controls. A fantastic, totally exhilarating rollercoaster read.' Sergeant Major Dan Mills, author of bestseller Sniper One
Apache is at its heart a ground-busting infantry tale told from an entirely new perspective. By the time these gutsy Uglies land in an occupied Taliban fort to join the ground fight, there is no doubt that attack helicopter pilots are flying grunts. What happens next is extraordinary. Owen West, author of Sharkman Six
Ed Macy left the British Army in January 2008, after twenty-three years service. He had amassed a total of 3,930 helicopter flying hours, 645 of them inside an Apache. Ed was awarded the Military Cross for his courage during the Jugroom Fort rescue in Helmand Province, Afghanistan one of the first ever in Army Air Corps history. Apache is his first book. He hopes it wont be his last.