<p><span style=color: rgba(51 51 51 1)>From Indiana farm boy to Vietnam fighter pilot and beyond Fredrick L. Pumroy often seemed to live on the edge. Stories about his narrow escapes from enemy anti-aircraft fire over the Ho Chi Minh Trail and dances with death in all manner of aircraft make for very entertaining reading in his cleanly written memoir?Born to Live on The Edge.</span></p><p><br></p><p><span style=color: rgba(51 51 51 1)>This one hundred-page book is a must-read for pilots-or for anyone who dreams of becoming one. Such readers will sigh with envy to read of a gift the eight-year-old Pumroy received from his father: a small one-seat plane that the boy and his father flew around in over the family farm until his father was forced to sell the plane. A high school jock who also played sports in college Pumroy joined the Air Force with every intention of becoming a fighter pilot.</span></p><p><br></p><p><span style=color: rgba(51 51 51 1)>It was on his first mission as a Forward Air Controller that reality overcame dreams of glory: I hadn't been shot at before and I didn't like it he remembers adding that over a two-month period his aircraft took 309 bullet holes. The section on Vietnam Loas and Cambodia is among the more exciting and best-written in this short memoir.&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(51 51 51 1)>There are chapters on flying all types of aircraft-military and civilian commercial and private-and none are dull. While he always thanked the Lord for keeping him alive through the dangers he faced after one near-fatal incident the veteran pilot says he began to wonder just how many more fixes God would get me out of.</span></p><p><br></p><p><span style=color: rgba(51 51 51 1)>The book is written in a clean and crisp manner and it is illustrated with photos taken by the author some while flying over hostile territory. There are stories about drinking games and boyish pranks that pilots in a war zone partake in to cope with stress and there are little asides about friends comrades and some top brass Pumroy met during his flying years. All of these people and events are related in a straightforward style that is honest without being cloyingly personal.</span></p><p><br></p><p><span style=color: rgba(51 51 51 1)>As with many people in hazardous jobs not every day in Pumroy's life was dangerous exciting or particularly interesting. The chapters about his farm and school days his time flying a desk and his post-Air Force career as a technical consultant may be of most interest to friends and family or to other once-dashing flyboys whose days of danger and glory are long gone. From the death-defying to the mundane Pumroy kindly shares his memories with readers.&nbsp;</span></p>
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