In the bar we practiced the noble art of medicine. We knew the sickness and the remedy. "Ailment - death of a close friend or companion: remedy - wash the brain wound well with alcohol until the infected area becomes numb to the touch. Continue the treatment until the wound closes. A scar will remain, but this will not show after a while.

Another fighter pilot's memoir! This one is from WWII. He was shot down and badly burned, had his hands and face reconstructed by pioneering plastic surgeon Archibald McIndoe, became a member of the Guinea Pig Club where he knew Richard Hillary, goes back to being a pilot, vows to bring down fifteen planes for each of his fifteen surgeries, does it, breaks his back in another crash, is sent back to McIndoe for treatment for that, and finally becomes a test pilot right in time for the war to end. No one can say this guy had an uneventful life.

Heartbreakingly, McIndoe didn't want to certify either Page or Hillary as fit to return to duty; he spent so much time getting to know them and putting them back together, he didn't want to give them his stamp of approval to go back and most likely be killed.

One thing puzzled me. Page writes that when Hillary died in a training accident, some people thought it was suicide, but Page believed there was no way Hillary would have killed his observer along with himself. Enigmatically, he writes that he knew Hillary and he knows why he crashed. But he doesn't say why. Anyone have any idea what was up with that?

Another minor bit that I found interesting was a funny anecdote in which he meets two beautiful young women at a party and mentions that he needs to find a place to crash. They invite him to come home with them. He eagerly accepts, thinking he's in for a threesome, but is disappointed when they show him to a bedroom and close the door. In fact, he writes, they were lesbians and very much in love. I mention this because it's an incident from the middle of WWII, in which two women were living together, it was known at least within their friend circle that they were lesbians, and it was no big deal - the joke here was very much on Page and his assumptions.

Page is a very good writer for the most part, and writes with equal vividness of flying, of combat, and of his hospital experience. If von Richthofen's memoir was emotionally one-note, this was the remedy: Page details the rage, fear, camaraderie, grief, joy, bloodlust, revenge, lust, humor, and exhaustion that was his war experience. Of course he had the benefit of hindsight, as this was written well after the war ended.

I've meant to read this since 2018, when I read Hillary's memoir followed by a much more dry account of The Guinea Pig's Club. Better late than never!

The end trails off into somewhat random anecdotes about his postwar job experiences, but other than that, this is an excellent book. Recommended.

This prompted me to take a deep dive into the Guinea Pig Club. The Wikipedia entry is now way more useful than the last time I checked, providing a complete list of memoirs by members, many still available (though not the one with the deadpan or perhaps merely factual title I Burned My Fingers), and also a list of pages of individual members. The latter is a trip and I will post some of my findings tomorrow.

philomytha: girl in woods with a shaft of sunlight falling on her (beam me up)

From: [personal profile] philomytha


My school history teacher was a huge McIndoe fan, so I ended up learning an awful lot about the dawn of plastic surgery, almost all of which I have forgotten now, though it was more about the other medical developments that made it possible rather than about the pilots who were his patients. This sounds like a great memoir, definitely one to read.
lemonsharks: (Default)

From: [personal profile] lemonsharks


This has nothing to do with the current post but o my heck i need to read your review of this book. Because it looks Weird.

Brought to you by hardboiled portal fantasy of 1939 as interpreted by 1987.

image

sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


I just looked this up on Amazon and it sounds BANANAS. The one and only review starts out with the setup. It's not only portal fantasy with a hard-boiled PI, it's BODY SHARING PORTAL FANTASY.

In 1939 Chicago, private eye Miles Palodon walks into a dark alley for a meeting only to see a flash in his face and feel the bullet enter his chest. The next thing he knows he's sitting up and where a bullet should be, an arrow protrudes.

He looks over a battlefield full of dead bodies decked out in armor, weapons, swords, pikes, bows and arrows scattered about, the occasional horse wandering.

And a voice in his head saying "pull the arrow from our body or we'll die."

It is called the pairing and Miles had been pulled into a parallel universe into the body of his double. Close but not exact. His body is in better shape and when Miles looks into a mirror, he sees an unbroken nose.

Prince Palodon of Palandrum is his name and as the eldest child, he's the heir to his father's throne. Someone has tried to kill him, the battle long past, and the Prince suspects one of his siblings. His father, the King, is near death, some sort of wasting disease.

Miles, while sharing the body with the Prince, seems to be mostly in control.

He takes on the job of finding who wants the Prince dead, He's a P.I. after all.


This entire thing sounds like the setup for a kdrama. In fact I'd be amazed if a kdrama with this general premise doesn't already exist.
Edited Date: 2023-02-10 07:58 pm (UTC)
sovay: (What the hell ass balls?!)

From: [personal profile] sovay


He takes on the job of finding who wants the Prince dead, He's a P.I. after all.

Oh, my God.
movingfinger: (Default)

From: [personal profile] movingfinger


I can't remember whether you've read/I've recommended Eric Newby's Love and War in the Apennines before---it's a POW camp escape story, not a downed-pilot story, but probably enjoyable for you... Newby in general is well worth reading.
sovay: (I Claudius)

From: [personal profile] sovay


I like escape stories.

If you have not already read it, may I recommend Michael Gilbert's Death in Captivity (1952), a murder mystery set around a tunnel escape in a POW camp, influenced by the author's own experiences in WWII?
sovay: (Rotwang)

From: [personal profile] sovay


I never even heard of it, thanks.

Welcome! I got it from [personal profile] skygiants (and then I got it home and my mother recognized it immediately, because she likes Gilbert's novels in general. The others sound more civilian, though).
genarti: Knees-down view of woman on tiptoe next to bookshelves (Default)

From: [personal profile] genarti


I was about to recommend this as well! It's fascinating, and the sort of story where you can really tell that it's drawing on personal experience -- the little details and absurdities.
movingfinger: (Default)

From: [personal profile] movingfinger


I don't seem to have a copy any longer, but as I recall now, most of the story is about evading recapture by hiding in the community. And Wanda.
cyphomandra: boats in Auckland Harbour. Blue, blocky, cheerful (boats)

From: [personal profile] cyphomandra


Ooh while you’re on a Guinea Pig club kick, I would recommend Liz Byrski’s In Love and War, which is about the nurses there and often has quite a different perspective (for example, the male patients were encouraged to sexually harass the nurses to make them feel more “normal”; IIRC she also talks about a gay patient who was terrified of being outed)
sovay: (Rotwang)

From: [personal profile] sovay


This prompted me to take a deep dive into the Guinea Pig Club.

I may have recommended it before, but this episode of Foyle's War is effectively set at the Guinea Pig Club (serial numbers more smudged than filed off) and while I have hardly ever been able to care about its actual mystery plot, the setting made it instantly one of my favorites.
sovay: (Rotwang)

From: [personal profile] sovay


I watched that last night on your recommendation! It was excellent.

I'm so glad! I thought I would have mentioned it.

I especially liked the parallel drawn between the pilots with burns and Foyle's son with PTSD.

Yes! You see why I have trouble caring about the mystery plot; it is the least interesting thing in the episode. (I actually thought of Foyle's son when you were posting recently about nerves.)
genarti: Knees-down view of woman on tiptoe next to bookshelves (Default)

From: [personal profile] genarti


My reading list grows and grows! Especially since the writing style of this one sounds really fun -- not required in an interesting book, but always a great bonus.
wateroverstone: Biggles and Algy watching the approach of an unknown aircraft from Norfolk sand dunes (Default)

From: [personal profile] wateroverstone


I knew a man slightly - from the local pub - who had been treated at that burns unit during and after the war although he wasn't one of the original Guinea Pig Club. He wasn't a pilot but Air Crew, in a Lancaster, I think. He wouldn't talk about it though. The only reason he mentioned it to me was that he was tickled pink that I had a motorbike (I'm small, I was fairly light back then and I had a five hundred cc motorbike in the late eighties) and if he saw me at the bar he'd chat to me a bit about bikes as he loved them. He signed himself out of the Burns Unit for the Isle of Man TT fortnight for three years on the trot so he could race in them, then returned for more treatment afterwards.

He was a nice man, he had no visible scarring on his face or hands that I ever noticed, and I never learned any more of his war story than that. There were a lot of men, when I was young, who wouldn't talk about their war experiences.
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)

From: [personal profile] carbonel


For WWII, I can't remember if I've already recommended this, but Piece of Cake by Derek Robinson is a novel based on extensive research about the aviators in the Battle of Britain. It was also made into a six-part TV serial that I saw on PBS. (There's a sequel to the novel, A Good Clean Fight, set in North Africa, but I haven't read that one.)
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