Product Details
Ask the Pilot

Ask the Pilot
By Patrick Smith

List Price: $15.00
Price: $10.20 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

85 new or used available from $0.99

Average customer review:

Product Description

More than ever, air travel is a focus of curiosity, intrigue and anxiety. This year, some half a billion passengers will ride aboard the ten largest US airlines alone. Fair to say each one has a question, a doubt, and a lingering fear in the back of his or her mind. We take to the air routinely, yet few of us understand the how and why of jetting from New York to London in six hours. Patrick Smith, an airline pilot and author of Salon.com's popular air travel column, unravels the secrets and tells you all there is to know about the strange and fascinating world of commercial flight.

* Insights into safety, security, and the nuts and bolts of how planes fly

* Straight talk on turbulence, air traffic control, windshear and accidents

* The history, color and controversy of the world's airlines

* The awe and oddity of being a pilot

* The poetry and drama of airplanes, airports, and travelling abroad

Patrick speaks eloquently to our fears and curiosities, incorporating anecdotes, memoir, and a life's passion for flight. He tackles your toughest concerns, debunks conspiracies and urban myths, and in a rarely heard voice dares to return a dash of romance and glamour to air travel.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #34065 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-06-01
  • Released on: 2004-06-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
As an airline pilot and Salon.com’s air travel columnist, Smith has both aviation expertise and the ability to write with sassy intelligence, which turns out to be a winning combination for this book on the weird and fascinating world of commercial flying. While Smith has no special love for tiny seats or half-ounce bags of snack mix, he is nonetheless awed by the concept of flight: "Okay, flying sucks, but if you can’t value the idea of zipping to Hong Kong in twelve hours in a million-pound machine, there’s a problem." Having revised and organized his columns, Smith sets this book up in a loose Q&A format, and answers questions on the physics of flying, the wonder of autopilot, the treatment of pets below deck, air-ground communications and the degree to which passengers should worry about terrorism. Smith clearly possesses a wide breadth of knowledge about engines, takeoffs, weather patterns and other important aspects of flight; best of all he’s realistic without being alarmist. For example, when addressing the sudden change in the direction and/or velocity of the wind, known as "windshear," and whether or not it can "rip the wings off" a plane, he writes, "It’s like asking if a wave can break a ship in half. Theoretically, yes. Practically speaking, no."
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
"Anyone remotely afraid of flying should read this book, as should anyone who appreciates good writing and great information." -- New York Times Book Review

"Brilliantly down to earth and reassuring" -- Cath Urquhart, the Times (London)

"I wish I could fold up Patrick Smith and put him in my suitcase." -- Stephen Dubner, coauthor of Freakonomics

"Patrick Smith is extraordinarily knowledgeable about modern aviation, and communicates beautifully in English, not in pilot-ese." -- Alex Beam, Boston Globe

"Patrick Smith is one of the best writers around, period. Ask the Pilot is deliciously stylish and informative." -- James Kaplan, author and contributing editor, New York Magazine

"Smith has both aviation expertise and the ability to write with sassy intelligence" -- Publisher's Weekly

Patrick Smith is extraordinarily knowledgeable and communicates beautifully in English, not in pilot-ese. The ideal seatmate, writer and explainer. -- Alex Beam, Boston Globe

Patrick Smith is one of the best writers around, period. Ask the Pilot is deliciously stylish and informative. -- James Kaplan, author of Pearl's Progress

From the Author
My love of commercial aviation nurtured a passion for seeing the world, and I encourage that passion in others. I'd never have traipsed off to sixty-some countries if I hadn't been infatuated with the airplane first, and what underpins my writing is a desire that readers, too, will come to see the airplane as more than just an inconvenient means to an end.

I wanted to write a book that didn't sound like it was written by a pilot. Ask the Pilot is meant to be unexpectedly thoughtful, provocative, and even a bit eccentric. It is more than a collection of facts, stats, and gee-whiz about planes; it touches on everything from aerodynamics and safety issues to airport architecture and the liveries of the world's airlines.


Customer Reviews

Unraveling the mysteries of air travel5
I'm a tough grader when it comes to non-fiction books, probably because I've suffered so many disappointments: books that begin with a dynamite first chapter filled with revelations and insights...that are then repeated for another few dozen chapters.

Ask the Pilot manages to avoid these pitfalls, possibly because it's not trying to impart any earthshaking philosophy (other than demonstrating that flying is safe), possibly because there's so much material to cover that it's only moderately repetitious, partly because flying is inherently fascinating, and primarily because of Smith's breezy and entertaining style.

Reading this book is like hanging out with a witty storyteller, except I missed the fact that I couldn't pull on his sleeves a few times to ask pointed questions. Too, I'd love to have heard more about the economics of the industry, but I accept that this is not particularly his area of interest and can't quibble about that. Although the book jumps around a bit chronologically and topically (understandable given its origins) it's one that I could hardly bear to put down once I started it. The toilet story alone is a classic.

As one who has never quite felt comfortable buzzing about the skies in a metal tube traveling hundreds of miles an hour, I have sometimes thought about trying to start an airline (White Knuckles) that caters to my fellow fearful passengers (flight attendants who hold your hand and explain the meaning of every scary sound and bump). Until White Knuckles gets off the ground, Ask the Pilot is the next best thing.

From another airline pilot - accurate, witty, informative5
None of the previous reviews of this book appear to be by fellow airline pilots - this one is. I suppose that airline pilots really don't need to read books like this to know the answers to the questions that Mr. Smith answers.

I happened to stumble across this book at a local bricks and mortar bookstore on the way to a comfy chair loaded with coffee and some other titles. Seeing Ask a Pilot on the shelves, I grabbed it for a quick skim. What was meant as a quick skim turned into a relatively thorough read.

I am an airline pilot with almost 20 years of working for the airlines. Although I might quibble about some points here and there, the book was very accurate. Never once did I find myself uttering the cattle by- product expletive. I did find myself silently chuckling and nodding my head several times.

The book is written as a question and answer format, with the answer to each question being essentially a small essay. The questions vary from airline safety, pilot pay, interaction between flight attendants and pilots, and technical aspects.

If you are looking for a shocking expose on the airlines - look elseware. On the other hand, this is no airline puff-piece.

Mr. Smith is a good writer. The book is witty, accurate, and engaging. There are so many misconceptions about so many aspects of the airline industry, it is refreshing to see a book that deals with them with accuracy and style.

Insightful, humorous, and well worth the read5
The essay "Not All Mistakes Are Fatal. Some Are Worse" alone is worth the price of the book. His witty writing aside, Patrick Smith gives very straightforward explanations of technical matters that will make sense to those of us who aren't engineers or physics graduates. This book offers you a better understanding of planes and the people who transport them, and what all those regulations, codes, and other stuff in the world of flying really boil down to. Granted, it comes with a heavy dose of Mr. Smith's own opinion -- which, if you're looking for an insider's view of the industry, is entirely appropriate and generally pretty common-sense. If you've ever been curious about whether it's really safer to fly in a large plane than a small one, where airport codes come from, or why the flight crew, when you mention it at deplaning, didn't seem to notice the turbulence that nearly made you lose your coffee in an unfortunate fashion -- check out this book for the answers to these and other questions about flying you may have (if you're a jaded air traveler like most of us are these days) long forgotten you ever had.