SILVER MEDALIST FOR THE GENERAL NONFICTION FLORIDA BOOK AWARD
In 1937, Amelia Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, vanished as the world watched. Speculation ran rampant, and most assumed that they had crash-landed in the ocean and perished. But did they? With more than thirteen years of painstaking international research, Dave Horner brings into focus Earhart's final days. He minutely dissects prevailing theories, comparing them to evidence only recently uncovered. He presents an astonishing and well-documented conclusion that explains, once and for all, what happened to this beloved aviatrix.
Horner marshals evidence from a variety of sources, proving that Earhart was neither lost at sea nor wrecked on Nikumaroro, where many search expeditions have failed to deliver concrete results. Integrating information garnered from numerous interviews, Pacific Islander folklore, and US and Japanese military documents, Horner argues that Earhart ventured north of her intended destination in search of a place to land her plane. Blending drama, mystery, and shocking revelations with the steady balance of an objective investigator, Horner's compelling findings provide a definitive answer to this fascinating riddle.
Related Subjects
Biographical Biographies Biographies & History Biography & History History Transportation