Death of a Lady Pilot: Difference between revisions
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'''Chronology'''<br /> | '''Chronology'''<br /> | ||
The [[Eden Pond Chronology|events]] of the novel take place in September 1943. ''Women's Air Service'' follows [[ | The [[Eden Pond Chronology|events]] of the novel take place in September 1943. ''Women's Air Service'' follows [[Women's Air Service]] and precedes [[Hanford Intrigue]]. | ||
==Major Characters== | ==Major Characters== |
Revision as of 13:05, 16 February 2023
Women's Air Service (working title) is the third conceived book in the Eden Pond Series.
Overview
In 1943, as fears of invasion fade, the focus shifts to supporting the war effort both home and abroad. The U.S. Navy opens the Tillamook Naval Air Station to house blimps intended for air support of shipping convoys along the west coast. Tillie Larkin, pilot and close friend of Eden Pond, offers her services to the station, arguing as a longtime area pilot she knows the coves, bays, and waters of the Oregon coast from the air better than anyone. The commander of the air station reluctantly allows her to serve in an advisory capacity, helping to train the male pilots assigned to the station.
But before they’ll accept her as an advisor, the pilots want Tillie to prove her own skills. A longtime crop duster and barnstormer, Tillie gladly agrees to go up in her Travel Air E-4000 biplane and show them a few stunts—stuff that’ll make their ear hair curl. But as she clears the runway and starts to climb, the engine stalls and the biplane crashes, killing Tillie on impact.
The Navy is quick to write the crash off as pilot error, but Eden knew her friend was too skilled and experienced to make a careless mistake. She suspects something more sinister, perhaps even sabotage by military men who resented the presence of a woman pilot. With the help of her friend Deputy Allan Stern, she sets out to learn the truth about Tillie’s untimely end.
Chronology
The events of the novel take place in September 1943. Women's Air Service follows Women's Air Service and precedes Hanford Intrigue.