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Cull, Brian with Nicola Malizia and Frederick Galea. Spitfires over Sicily: The Crucial Role of the Malta Spitfires in the Battle of Sicily, January - August 1943. London: Grub Street, 2000
ISBN 1-902304-33-2
Brian Cull and Nicola Malizia co-authored with Christopher Shores several seminal air histories of the sortie-by-sortie genre, including Malta: The Hurricane Years and Malta: The Spitfire Year. The latest from Cull and Maliziawith Frederick Galeapicks up the story of the air war above and around Malta where they left it at the end of Malta: The Spitfire Year and, to a lesser extent, Shores' Fighters over Tunisia, with the same kind of detailed, day-by-day, dogfight-by-dogfight narrative.
Spitbombers: Malta on the Offensive, January-March 1943
Readers familiar with the style of the Shores/Cull/Malizia team, or other works in this genre by Shores, will recognize how Spitfires over Sicily is assembled from air unit diaries, after action reports, memoirs, letters, personal diaries, etc. As usual, the authors are careful to provide aircraft IDs (including serial numbers), pilot names and ranks, and similar supporting facts. While the bulk of the material comes from Allied accountsmostly British and Commonwealth, but some American fighter squadrons flew Spitfires from Malta and neighboring Gozothese have been compared to Axis records, and the authors offer as much as possible from the perspective of the Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica. In particular, readers familiar with Prien's Jagdgeschwader 53 will find some material about German operations from that series.
The action was now relentless as raid followed raid. More B-25s and B-26s attacked Gerbini and its satellites shortly after 1500, Spitfires from 81 and 242 Squadrons providing top cover. Bombs were seen to burst on the south-west corner of the main aerodrome, where fires were started. Four Bf109s were sighted at 20,000 feet over Gerbini but no engagement ensued. As the formation made its way back across the coast, three small naval vessels were observed off Bruccoli, two stationary and one steaming westwards, but were not attacked. Before the raiders and their escorts had reached their home bases, the next formation was on its way to its way to attack Gerbini, 20 Spitfires from 126 and 1435 Squadrons providing top cover to the B-17s and their close-escort P-38s. The results of this latest attack could not be seen by the Spitfire pilots owing to heavy smoke over the target area, who anyway had their hands full when Bf109Gs and Macchis attempted to intercept over Gerbini. A Messerschmitt was claimed damaged by Flt Sgt F.K. Halcombe (JK368/V-J) of 1435 Squadron, Plt Off Chandler (JK139/V-X) similarly claimed a Macchi damaged, while Flg Off Geoff White of 126 Squadron shot down another:
Although there is enough coverage of the ground and naval aspects of the Sicilian campaign to provide context for the air ops, this is almost entirely an account of operations in the sky, and as such nicely complements the best books about Husky, such as Bitter Victory by Carlo D'Este. In addition to air combat, the book tracks the movement of squadrons, the comings and goings of squadron commanders (and some pilots), crash landings, rescues of ditched pilots, unofficial "test flights" of "liberated" Axis aircraft, captures and escapes, and so on. The authors also offer photos of pilots and aircraft as well as orders of battle and lengthy tabular compilations of claims, confirmed victories, aircraft losses, casualties, etc.
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Reviewed 24 September 2000
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