Category World War I

The Hunting Falcon is now on sale in the U.S.

According to Amazon.com (U.S.), The Hunting Falcon: The story of WWI German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke has been available since 3 April. It was first offered for sale in the UK on 6 March 2025.

The list price is $39.95 and it is available from Amazon.com right now for $37.26. See: Amazon.com: The Hunting Falcon: The Story of WW1 German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke: 9781399085014: Lawrence, Christopher A, Karamales, Jay: Books

It is available in the UK via Amazon.com (UK) for £25.00 at: The Hunting Falcon: The Story of WW1 German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke: Amazon.co.uk: Lawrence, Christopher A, Karamales, Jay: 9781399085014: Books and directly from the publisher discounted to £25.00 at Pen and Sword Books: The Hunting Falcon – Hardback.

Hans-Joachim Buddecke’s story start before the war in Indianapolis, working for his American uncle (later the grandfather of author Kurt Vonnegut Jr.). He became the third German ace to be awarded the Blue Max (after Immelmann and Boelcke) after clearing the skies over Gallipoli. See: Award Dates for the Blue Max (1916) – The Dupuy Institute. He was the pilot who shot down Lawrence of Arabia’s younger brother (no relationship to me).

The Hunting Falcon is available in the UK

Hunting Falcon, as of today, is now available on Amazon.com UK. The site has the release date of 6 March 2025. It has a list price of £25 and they are selling it right now at a 25% discount for £18.71:  The Hunting Falcon: The Story of WW1 German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke: Amazon.co.uk: Lawrence, Christopher A, Karamales, Jay: 9781399085014: Books

It is available for £17.50 directly from Pen & Sword: Pen and Sword Books: The Hunting Falcon – Hardback

Amazon.com U.S. is listing its available date of April 3, 2025. It is available for pre-order at $42.95: Amazon.com: The Hunting Falcon: The Story of WW1 German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke: 9781399085014: Lawrence, Christopher A, Karamales, Jay: Books

 

Proposed book cover for The Hunting Falcon

A commentator on our last post on The Hunting Falcon stated that “Chris, you have very good book cover designers.” See: The Hunting Falcon to be released in the UK on Friday, 14 February – The Dupuy Institute

Now, our original cover recommendation to Pen & Sword was this:

This was kind of my recommendation, as I wanted to emphasis Hans Buddecke’s tie-in with Gallipoli. I figured that had marketing value. Jay Karamales actually did all the work.

Pen & Sword came back with this:

Now, I suspect part of the reason for this cover is that it matched up with the covers of their other World War I air books, for which they have quite a collection. See: Pen and Sword Books: WWI. Our book is on page 4, still listed as pre-order.

My understanding is that Pen & Sword does have the book in stock. Right now Amazon.com (UK) is saying it is “currently unavailable” while the Amazon.com (U.S.) is giving their U.S. release date as 31 March 2025.  I gather it takes a few days for the books to be shipped through the system.

 

The Hunting Falcon to be released in the UK on Friday, 14 February

The Hunting Falcon is being released in the UK the Friday, 14 February.

According to Amazon.com it will be released in the U.S. March 31, 2025.

The Hunting Falcon covers the story of the third German ace to be awarded the Blue Max, after Immelmann and Boelcke. Hans-Joachim Buddecke was the fighter pilot and squadron leader who established German air dominance over Gallipoli in late 1915 – early 1916. A book of his story was published in German in 1918 but was never translated until recently. We (meaning Jay Karamales) translated it, and then we researched the background behind some of his stories. So the book alternates between several translated chapters from his book then a chapter explaining in more depth the people and events behind his story. For example, it includes a detailed description of the air operations around Gallipoli.

Hans-Joachim Buddecke story starts in Indianapolis before the Great War. He talks about his American cousin and uncle who had recently encouraged him to move from Germany to the United States. We have been able to research and identify that uncle as Albert Lieber, a very successful brewer and businessman in Indianapolis, who he went into the airplane business with. His cousin was Edith Lieber Vonnegut, the tall and attractive socialite mother of the famous atmospheric scientist Dr. Bernand Vonnegut (1914-1997) and the even more famous writer Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (1922-2007).

Leaving his airplane at the infield of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Hans Buddecke snuck past the British blockade into Germany and became third ace in the German air force. This book details for the first time his complete story, including the unsavory aspects of it.

I was in Liverpool

My grandfather was born in Rhyl Wales and grew up in Liverpool England. Here is a copy of his shipping record during the Great War. He did five voyages during the war. He did a voyage to Murmansk afterwards during the Russian Civil War (which I have blogged about twice: see Murmansk – The Dupuy Institute and  Mutiny in Murmansk – The Dupuy Institute).

The first two voyages were on the SS Adriatic. I think this is it: RMS Adriatic (1906) – Wikipedia. My grandfather had just turned 15 when he went on his first voyage. Both voyages were to New York and back.

Next voyage was in the SS Cedar Branch.  I think this is it: SS Aenos (1910) – Wikipedia. It is listed in the log book at 2222 tons and 404 HP. She is listed in Wikipedia as 3,554 GRT and 2,222 NRT. The voyage was to Gallao or Callao. Callao is the main port for Peru. 

His fourth voyage was with the Maria de Larrrinaga. Don’t have a Wikipedia link to that ship, but it was 2678 net tons and 429 HP. It is listed here:  Larrinaga Line (theshipslist.com). The destination is listed as OHMS (On His Majesty’s Service).

His fifth voyage was with the Dictator. I do not have a link to here. The number 3149 is written in the lower right corner of the ship listing. The voyage was to Gibraltar and the U.S.A.

The war ended on 11/11/18 (now Armistice Day). On 14/11/18 he went to sea on the Nigeria. This is the ship that brought him to Murmansk. The number 2590 is written in the lower right corner of the ship listing. The destination is listed as OHMS.

Current book release schedule

I have four books in process or about to be released. They are:

The Battle for Kyiv:
– UK release date: 28 November
– U.S. release date: 18 January 2024

Aces at Kursk:
– UK release date: 30 January 2024
– U.S. release date: posted as 18 January 2024, but suspect release date will be in March 2024.

Hunting Falcon:
– UK release date: 28 February 2024
– U.S. release date: posted as 29 February 2024, but suspect released date will be in April 2024.

The Siege of Mariupol:
– UK release date: sometime in 2024
– U.S. release date: sometime in 2024

Books under consideration for 2024/2025:
The Battle for the Donbas
The Battle of Tolstoye Woods (from the Battle of Kursk)
More War by Numbers

Three books to be published this year

I have been quiet about the books that I am working on and publishing because some of them have been slower to release than expected.

I have three books coming out this year. The UK hardcover release dates are:

Aces at Kursk: 30 July 2023
The Battle of Kyiv: 30 August 2023
The Hunting Falcon: 30 September 2023

The U.S. hardcover release dates according to Amazon.com are:

Aces at Kursk: 30 September 2023
The Battle of Kyiv: 30 October 2023
The Hunting Falcon: 31 October 2023

So for a brief moment in time I will be pumping out a book a month. I am currently working on two other books (they might be released in 2023) and I have one other listed on Amazon.com (UK) called “The Other Battle of Kursk” with a release date of 16 July 2024. This is the book “The Battle of Tolstoye Woods.” This has been discussed with the publisher and I may get it published in 2024.

Of course, the only way one gets a book done is to ignore everything else. If some people feel I should be responding in a timely manner to their emails or requests, there is a reason I have not been. Sorry. Three books coming out in one year is evidence that there is some validity to that.

Some relevant links related to Aces at Kursk:

Aces at Kursk – Chapter Listing | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Aces at Kursk | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Is this my last Kursk book? | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org): The answer is no. I will be working on (and maybe completing) The Battle of Tolstoye Woods in 2024.

145 or 10? | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

So did Kozhedub shoot down 62, 64 or 66 planes? | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

5th Guards Fighter Regiment, 7 July 1943 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

The 728th Fighter Regiment on 16 July 1943 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Soviet versus German kill claims at Kursk | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

So What Was Driving the Soviet Kill Claims? | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Aces at Kursk – Chapters | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

And related to The Battle for Kyiv: most of this blog from December 2021 through April 2022:

December | 2021 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

January | 2022 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

February | 2022 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

March | 2022 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

April | 2022 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

And related to Hunting Falcon:

Award Dates for the Blue Max (1916) | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

 

Video of Infantry Fighting near Bakhmut

THE INSANE FOOTAGE OF UKRAINIAN SOLDIERS IN THE BATTLE FOR THE LAST ROAD TO BAKHMUT || 2023 – YouTube

This video has been floating around for a few days. It is worth watching. More 1916 than RMA. This is fighting outside of Bakhmut on the route into the town. There are pictures of people being shot in this video. 

A few observations:

  1. 0:44: One Ukranian soldier has been killed “Norman.”
  2. 1:08: Grenade attack?
  3. 1:30: first JRR Tolkien reference.
  4. 1:37: second JRR Tolkien reference.
  5. 1:56: grenade being thrown.
  6. 2:30: three clear targets
  7. 2:40: clip change
  8. 2:50: shooting continues
  9. 3:34: Another Tolkien reference.
  10. 3:38: Other people deployed
  11. I see that three Russians have been killed so far. Looks like all were done by one man, “Tikhey”
  12. 5:35: instructions to preserve ammo.
  13. 5:38: wounded Russian
  14. 6:24: Another clip change
  15. 6:31: incoming mortar fire
  16. 7:14: Two more Russians engaged.
  17. 7:44: It is claimed Russian is killed.
  18. 9:02: Close in mortar hit
  19. 10:10: One person is reported wounded.
  20. 10:26: “Normans” magazines have been used. 

These are the Da Vinci Wolves: Da Vinci Wolves | MilitaryLand.net. The “Right Sector” is a far-right Ukrainian nationalist organization (see: Right Sector – Wikipedia). They currently hold no seats in the Ukrainian parlament (the Rada). 

Other similar videos:

Ukrainian soldiers storm Russian trench in terrifying video of assault on Wagner in Bakhmut – YouTube

Ukrainian soldiers take Russian trench in terrifying POV footage from Bakhmut – YouTube

First video as annotated by The Telegraph: Ukrainian soldiers fight off Russians in battle for Bakhmut – ‘Orcs jumped into our trenches’ – YouTube

Award Dates for the Blue Max (1916)

Still sidetracked somewhat on the Great War air research. Sorry if this does not hold the interest of many of you. I have been examining the list of the first German aviators who received the Pour le Merite, commonly called the Blue Max, named after its first recipient, Max Immelmann. A total of 13 pilots were awarded the Blue Max in 1916. These first recipients are (name, number of victories, dates, date of death, age, and any notes):

1. Max Immelmann (8): 12 January 1916, KIA 18 June 1916 (25)

2. Oswald Boelcke (8): 12 January 1916, KIA (mid-air collision) 28 October 1916 (25)

3. Hans-Joachim Buddecke (7): 14 April 1916, KIA 10 March 1918 (27)

4. Kurt Wintgens (8): 1 July 1916, KIA 25 September 1916 (22)

5. Max Ritter von Mulzer (8): 8 July 1916, died in testing crash 26 September 1916 (23)

6. Otto Parschau (8): 10 July 1916, KIA 21 July 1916 (25)

7. Walter Hoehndorf (8), 20 July 1916, Crashed 5 September 1917 (24)

8. Ernst Freiherr von Althaus (8): 21 July 1916, died 1946 (56)

9. Wilhelm Frankl (6 or 9): 16 July 1916 or 12 August 1916, KIA (wing failure) 8 April 1917 (23) – Jewish, converted to Christianity in 1917.

10. Rudolf Berthold (8): 12 October 1916, killed in Kapp Putsch 15 May 1920 (28)

11. Gustav Leffers (8): 5 November 1916, KIA 27 December 1916 (21)

12. Albert Dossenbach (9): 11 November 1916, KIA 3 July 1917 (26) – two-seater pilot at time of award

13. Hans Berr (10): 4 December 1916, KIA (mid-air collision) 6 April 1917 (26)

 

I believe that these are all the airmen that had been awarded the Blue Max in 1916. Of those, 11 died during the war, one died violently shortly after the war, and only one died of natural causes.

According to website The Aerodrome, 81 German military aviators were awarded the Blue Max. 76 army aviators and 5 naval aviators. They also provide a listing of the 62 German aces who won it. A total of 687 Pour le Merite were awarded during the Great War.

Let me know if there is anything I have missed in this listing. Note that I have two different dates given for when Wilhelm Frankl was awarded the Blue Max.

 

Rickenbacker at Narragansett Park Speedway – 1915

On September 18, 1915 Eddie Rickenbacker (America’s top ace in the Great War) won the 100 mile race at Narragansett Park Speedway in Providence, Rhode Island. It was his third win that year.

One internet lap board has his lap leader breakdown as (100 one-mile laps):

Eddie Rickenbacker in a Maxwell: leads laps 1-36
Ralph DePalma in a Stutz: leads laps 37-44
Bob Burman in a Peugeot: leads laps 45-63
Ralph DePalma: leads laps 64-76
Eddie Rickenbacker: leads laps 77-100

See: https://www.racing-reference.info/race-results/1915_Providence_Race/UO/

On the other hand, The Boston Sunday Globe dated September 19, 1915, page 15, has a slightly different account. It says:

“He {Rickenbacker] shot into the lead on the first lap, but was crowded back into third place before the second mile ended. There he held his place watching the speed of the others and always within 50 feet of the leader.

But he had to stop in the 15th lap. He had some carburetor trouble, it was stated. Before he got going the leaders had passed around three laps. So it seemed if it was all over for him…

Rickenbacker cut loose, however, and very soon it was apparent that the little car with 1 on its radiator was coming around very frequently. First it was noticed that it had regained the laps lost to the end of the field. Then when 33 miles had been covered he had won back a lap, the leaders being 33 and Rickenbacker 31….

De Palma had the lead in the 37th mile and from that to the 57th, or a distance of 30 miles, he kept in the van. But every time he and Burman made a mile in 54 or 55 seconds Rickenbacker did it about 50 or under. So he continued to cut down the lead. Before 50 miles had been reached he had circled all the other again and so they were then but one mile ahead of him.

Burman then began to show signs of speed and to tear away from De Palma, having passed into first place on the 58th mile. And each mile, while he was leaving De Palma behind, Rickenbacker was gaining on him. The spectators then began to sit up and shout. And the shouting encouraged Rickenbacker, for he smiles and let his motor car roar its way a little faster.

When 60 miles had been reached, he was swinging around the upper curve with an abandon that seemed reckless, for he appeared to handling the car like a toy. It would whirl around and the rear wheels would start for the sky or the upper edge of the track only to get yanked back like an unruly horse that shied at a street car.

Then it would roar down the track with the driver laughing and nodding to his pit attendants, who help up blackboards telling him how fast he was going, his position, etc. Having evened up matter, it was then his plan to get the lead. De Palma was the first he went after, and when he had swung over the line on the 72nd mile and the cars tore around the first quarter, Rickenbacker went into second place.

It was now Burman only that separated him from first place. Then the real race began. One hardly realized that the Maxwell had passed when it was around again. It came so fast that people mistook it for some other car, and they asked where it was, no knowing it passed. A few times Rickenbacker was pocketed by some of the others, and to see the way he wiggled through without slower up was amazing. 

When the cars came swinging down for the 73rd mile it was seen that Rickenbacher was closing up on Burgamn. The passed over the line five seconds ahead. There was no question then of the outcome, it seemed. On the next lap they tor down side by side and it seemed was if Rickenbacker was playing with Burman.

They crossed the line with Burman four feet in the lead. For two more laps they swung around side by side and then, entering the 77th miles, Rickenbacker seemed to infuse new life into the his car, and he got into the lead. When he went over the line on that mile he was nine seconds ahead of Burman…

So as it neared the 100 mile every one was resigned to Rickenbacker’s win. And he crossed the line amid a great ovation, with 1 minute and 1 second to spare. Burman finished second, Haupt third, De Palma fourth.”

So, the  “race results” internet site only agrees with the newspaper report given at that time on lap 1, laps 37-44, laps 58-63, and laps 77-100. For the majority of the laps, they differ as to who was leading.

 

Note: The paper refers to him as Rickenbacker, although at this time he spelled his name Rickenbacher.