Flight 739: The Plane That Never Landed
A military charter vanishes over the Pacific. No distress call. No wreckage. Only questions that refuse to fade.
In this clear, unsensational investigation, Linda Davidson reconstructs the final hours of Flight 739-moving from routine position reports to sudden radio silence-and follows the search that swept thousands of square miles of open ocean. Drawing on official records, ship logs, contemporary procedures, and on-the-record testimony, she explains what the crew faced, what the evidence shows, and where the trail goes cold.
Inside you'll discover:
A precise scene-to-archive chronology-from takeoff to the last confirmed contact and beyond.
How 1960s navigation, HF radio, and position reporting worked-and the blind spots investigators had to accept.
Competing hypotheses (midair explosion, catastrophic failure, sabotage) tested against physics, procedure, and period technology.
What search patterns covered (and missed), and why the ocean can hide answers in plain sight.
The families' decades-long push for clarity and the official responses that shaped the public record.
The legacy: improvements in search-and-rescue coordination and what this case still teaches about uncertainty.
Meticulous and humane, Flight 739: The Plane That Never Landed is for readers who want evidence over spectacle-clarity where possible, honest limits where it isn't.