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Old 18th January 2007, 07:59
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Re: Battles With The Nachtjagd: The Night Airwar Over Europe 1939-1945

Quote:
Originally Posted by Del Davis View Post
I can tell you that the photo coverage is highly biased toward the RAF and there only a few new Luftwaffe shots. I suspect that text may follow the phootos in concentration and may present the subject frrom the bombers perspective.
Some more details:

According to the dust jacket, "Battles with the Nachtjagd" contains more than 400 photos. By my count, roughly 160 of them are of Luftwaffe pilots and aircraft.

Regarding the text: The book is primarily an anecdotal description of the night airwar, from May 1940 through 1945. In each chapter, Boiten and Bowman provide some background that serves as a thread tying all the personal narratives together. The ratio of personal accounts is about 70% RAF to 30% Luftwaffe. Of particular note are the chapter endnotes and photo captions, both of which are very detailed.

The appendices include:
- Orders of battle for Bomber Command, all Mosquito squadrons, 100 Group RAF, and the Nachtjagd.
- A list of Bomber Command's VC recipients.
- Capsule bios of the top 100 Nachtjagd aces.
- Luftwaffe/RAF/USAAF rank equivalents.
- RAF slang terms.

Also included is a glossary, bibliography, and an index of people and places.


The approach used in this book is very similar to the one used by Boiten in his two earlier works, namely "Nachtjagd" (1997) and, especially, "Night Airwar" (1999.) Some of the text and photographs have certainly been recycled, but "Battles with the Nachtjagd" is much heftier at 348 pages + 112 pages of photos, vs. 240 pages in each of the older books.

So is it worth getting "BWTN" if you already own the other two books? For comparison, I did a quick check of the index entries and photo content in each of them.

In general, "BWTN" has more page references for index entries that are common to all three books, and it has a number of entries that don't appear in the other two. It also has many more photos, without a great deal of overlap. It therefore appears to be a revised and expanded edition, with new accounts and additional detail.

However, "BWTN" is not a complete replacement for "Nachtjagd" because the latter:
- has a much higher percentage of Luftwaffe content, and it contains several index entries that do not appear in "BWTN".
- has far more extensive coverage of the Me 262 as a nightfighter.
- has useful appendices that aren't included in "BWTN", e.g. Nachtjagd battle strengths; Nachtjagd claim and loss totals by unit, year and theater.
- includes index entries for units, e.g. NJG1, JG300, (N)JG26, 101 Squadron, etc. ("BWTN" omits the unit index entries, which is a bummer.)
- has a much more comprehensive bibliography.

Summary:
If you don't have the older books, "BWTN" will be a useful addition to your night airwar library because it tells the human side of the night airwar.
If your interest is primarily in the Luftwaffe, then you might want to go for "Nachtjagd" instead of/in addition to "BWTN".
If you already have both of Boiten's older books, you might still want to get "BWTN" for its new content and photographs.

Hope this helps,
Leon Venter

Last edited by leonventer; 18th January 2007 at 09:10.
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