In the seventy years since the disappearance of Amelia Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan during a flight over the central Pacific, their fate has remained a mystery.
Dozens of books have offered a variety of solutions to the puzzle, but they all draw on the same handful of documents and conflicting eyewitness accounts. Now a wealth of new information uncovered by the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR) allows this book to offer the first fully documented history of what really happened.
Scrupulously accurate and thrilling to read, it tells the story from the letters, logs and telegrams that recorded events as they unfolded. Many long-accepted facts are revealed as myths. Author Ric Gillespie, TIGHAR’s executive director, draws on the work of his organization’s historians, archæologists and scientists, who compiled and analysed more than five thousand documents relating to the Earhart case. Their research led to the hypothesis that Earhart and Noonan died as castaways on a remote Pacific atoll.
However, this book is not a polemic that argues for a particular theory. Rather, it presents all of the authenticated historical dots and leaves it to the reader to make the connections. In addition to details about Earhart’s career and final flight, the book examines her relationship with the US government and the massive search undertaken by the US Coast Guard and Navy.
About the Author
Ric Gillespie is an internationally recognized authority on the Earhart disappearance whose writing has appeared in the Naval Institute’s Proceedings and Naval History and in LIFE Magazine. He has led eight archæological search expeditions to the Pacific.
- ISBN10 1591143195
- ISBN13 9781591143192
- Publish Date 1 October 2006
- Publish Status Transferred
- Out of Print 11 November 2010
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Naval Institute Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 288
- Language English