High,
Wide, and Frightened
Louise
Thaden
Foreword by Patty Wagstaff
High
adventure in aviation’s Golden Age.
Born
in 1905 and raised in Arkansas, Louise Thaden attended the
University of Arkansas from 1921 to 1925 before moving to
California, where she earned her pilot’s certificate
in 1927. Within the year, she had broken the women’s
world record for altitude and endurance. In 1929 she won
the first Women’s Air Derby, a transcontinental race.
Over the next several years, Thaden continued to set records
and win awards until 1938 when she retired to spend more
time with her family and write these memoirs.
“Adventure,
history, danger, intrigue, death. Tom Clancy? No, Louise
Thaden, and it’s all true. The unassuming contemporary
of Amelia Earhart describes the dangers of racing and setting
records in the fragile and precarious aircraft of aviation’s
youth. Flashy bravado is out. Quiet excellence is in. This
is a must-read.”
—Gene
Nora Jessen, author of The Powder Puff Derby of 1929:
The First All-Women’s Transcontinental Air Race
“Although
other women pilots of her era—like Amelia Earhart
and Jacqueline Cochran—are better known, it was Louise
who, in her own quiet way, was blazing a trail for others
to follow. I can think of no finer example for young women
today than Louise.”
—Claudia
Oakes, former curator, Aeronautics Department, National
Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution and author
of United States Women in Aviation Before World War I and
United States Women in Aviation 1930–1939
“The
Golden Era of Aviation was a time of great adventure and
personal sacrifice for flyers—particularly women flyers.
Louise Thaden was, by far, the most skilled and accomplished
aviatrix of that era. In her book, High, Wide, and Frightened,
Louise gives us a firsthand account of the life that she
and other women pilots pursued in their quest for the thrill
and romance of flight.”
—Capt.
Susan Dusenbury, Airborne Express
2004
6” X 9”
183 pages
52 black and white photographs
$22.50 (s) paper
978-1-55728-766-3 | 1-55728-766-X