A clear sky. A calm voice. A plane that never came home.
On October 21, 1978, twenty-year-old pilot Fred Valentich flew a routine hop over Australia's Bass Strait-and vanished mid-transmission after reporting a metallic object "hovering" above him. In perfect weather, with full fuel and steady radio contact, VH-DSJ simply disappeared. No wreckage. No oil slick. No goodbye.
In The Vanishing Pilot, investigative author Linda Davidson reconstructs the final hour in relentless detail: the flight plan, the eerie radio exchange, the massive air-sea search, and the official report that explained everything except the one thing that mattered. Moving between cockpit and coastline, tape reel and tide chart, Davidson examines the competing theories-disorientation, hoax, military secret, and the encounter that dare not speak its name-without losing sight of the human being at the center of the myth.
Part forensic reconstruction, part meditation on uncertainty, this is the definitive narrative of a mystery that still haunts the Southern sky. Because sometimes the only thing louder than a crash is the silence where an answer should be.
For readers of Erik Larson, Susan Orlean, and those who still look up when a light moves where no light should be.