One More Good Flight
The Amelia Earhart Tragedy
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Buy for $24.94
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Narrated by:
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J. Rodney Turner
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By:
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Ric Gillespie
This book is the product of The Earhart Project, a thirty-four-year investigation of the Earhart tragedy by The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery. TIGHAR investigators had no agenda. They were not out to advocate, excuse, honor, or impugn. They saw the Earhart disappearance as an aviation accident and reasoned the answer to its cause and outcome should be discoverable if they could find, assemble, and analyze the relevant data. To understand why she died it was necessary to strip away the myths and sentimentality that have grown up over the years and examine the hard truths behind how Earhart's trip around the world came about and why it went so terribly wrong.
The US Navy and Coast Guard were major players in the 1937 flight, disappearance, and search for Amelia Earhart, and in the aftermath. The story of the pressures and frustrations the services faced and the mistakes they made contain valuable lessons for today's commanders. Gillespie's first book, Finding Amelia-The True Story of the Earhart Disappearance (Naval Institute Press, 2006) chronicled what was known at that time. This new book updates the story with important new information from historical documents discovered since then and also provides extensive prequel and sequel narratives that complete the saga and give new perspective to the life and death of an American icon.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
©2024 The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (P)2024 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
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As to the narrator, he had a unique, very deep voice that, for me, sometimes made him a little hard to hear over my not-great ear buds. But he enunciated clearly and most of the time was easy to hear, if I turned it up enough. Some people described his performance as monotone and boring, and while I guess I can see what they meant, he didn't strike me that way. It's all a matter of personal preference, of course, but I've heard narrators that really were monotone, like they had no interest in nor comprehension of what they were reading, and I couldn't stand them, either. This man's performance struck me as someone who was being very calm and very rational, yet at the same time, deeply interested in what he was reading. Given the subject matter of this book--TIGHAR's meticulous research into Earhart's final flight and disappearance--I think he was an excellent choice.
Excellent Research
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I believe him
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Story and research is top notch but choice of narrator basically ruin this audiobook.
The monotone narrator is very hard to listen to
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Great analysis of Amelia Earhart’s Last Flight
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Ric Gillespie has done a magnificent job of synthesizing the decades of interests, passions and sheer hard work done by TIGHAR and its almost uncountable numbers of volunteers, on the Gardner Island hypothesis, and its results. And he, or the TIGHAR board, hired an excellent narrator. It could be difficult to make something like the radio logs, or lists of artifacts sound as compelling as they have been reading about them via the TIGHAR forum for years. J Rodney Turner doesn't allow that to happen. Even for things that turned out to be blind alleys, the narration carries an air of remembered suspense. This is a perfect summary report to the missing persons case of Amelia and Fred Noonan.
Hard evidence, delivered by an active, engaging narrator
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