SPAD VII Aces of World War 1
By (Author) Jon Guttman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
25th August 2001
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Military vehicles
European history
First World War
623.7464
Paperback
96
Width 184mm, Height 248mm, Spine 7mm
314g
Built by the 'Socit Anonyme Pour lAviation et ses Drivs', (SPAD), the SPAD VII was the first successful fighting scout design to emerge from the company that had traded as Duperdussin pre-war. Flown from the off by aces Paul Sauvage and Georges Guynemer, the scouts made an immediate impression. Indeed, the latter pilot was so impressed that he dubbed the Type VII the flying machine gun. The first of two volumes on SPAD aces, this book tells the whole story from the ace perspective. By the time production of the SPAD VII ended in the final months of 1918, around 6000 examples had been built, and Allied aces on every front had enjoyed success with the type.
A resident of Leesburg, Virginia, Jon Guttman is senior editor, research director and contributing writer for Primedia Enthusiast Publications. Specialising in World War 1 aviation, he has written six titles in the past, although this is his first volume for Osprey. Berkshire-based Harry Dempsey is a talented profile artist who specialises in fighter aircraft of World War 1. He has illustrated all of Ospreys World War 1 Aircraft of the Aces titles to date.