
The story opens with a vivid portrait of the sea’s alchemy, where sleek wooden hulls meet soaring wings to become the era’s flying‑boats—part aircraft, part Viking longship. Their golden frames, stripped of wartime camouflage, glide over the North Sea, embodying a daring blend of maritime tradition and aerial innovation. Readers are drawn into the quiet heroism of these vessels, built to hunt the lurking German U‑boats and to patrol the mist‑shrouded waters around Felixstowe.
Through the eyes of the four‑man crews—captain, navigator, wireless operator, and engineer—the book captures the rhythm of early naval aviation: the roar of engines, the tension of spotting a submarine, and the camaraderie forged amid salt‑sprayed decks. It celebrates Colonel J.C. Porte’s relentless vision, which turned experimental sketches into formidable machines that reshaped wartime strategy. The narrative balances technical detail with the romance of daring flights, offering listeners a compelling glimpse into a pivotal, yet often overlooked, chapter of aerial warfare.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (303K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-10-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

A Royal Navy veteran turned historian, he wrote vivid accounts of early naval aviation in the First World War. His books are valued for their close attention to flying boat operations and the people who carried them out.
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