Albuquerque Journal

WWII wartime biography tribute to resilience

- BY DONNA EDWARDS ASSOCIATED PRESS

American fighter pilot Joe Moser was shot down over France and captured by Germany in August 1944. The P-38 Lightning was the U.S.made fighter plane Moser was piloting when he went down.

But don’t worry — you don’t need to know technical jargon or even care about aircraft to love Tom Clavin’s “Lightning Down: A World War II Story of Survival.” Though, if you are interested in the specs, rest assured Clavin scratches that itch.

“Lightning Down” is a historical biography that contains the informatio­n of a textbook while reading like a novel.

The footnotes are often as interestin­g and wellwritte­n as the story itself. Given the quality of research and readabilit­y, it’s no surprise that Clavin has over a dozen such books under his belt along with a lengthy career in journalism. He knows that people are what make a story interestin­g and capitalize­s on it. That and cliffhange­rs, which precede white space throughout the book.

With a historical piece, you would think it would be difficult to have any real suspense to keep the pages turning, but Clavin manages it nonetheles­s. The prologue is a snippet from the end of Act II of the book, dropping readers immediatel­y into the action before jolting back to a quiet farm in Ferndale, Washington, where Moser’s life story begins.

Clavin starts well before Moser was born but sails quickly through Moser’s younger years, focusing on necessary and interestin­g details. Act I covers Moser’s family and his childhood, creating a foundation for the man we’ll spend about 300 pages with. The next two sections cover his time in the army and under German capture.

Although the bulk of the biography is of Moser’s years as an Air Force pilot, Clavin covers the entirety of his life. The book continues after his return home to show how his story was silenced due to peoples’ disbelief of his experience­s.

It reveals how he coped with concentrat­ion camp memories and adjusted to being a typical American family man and worker. It goes all the way up to his death in 2015.

Even with this informatio­n, nothing is spoiled because Clavin’s style and structure induce enough suspense to keep readers wrapped up in the moment.

And, despite the horrors that Moser experience­d and Clavin describes vividly, “Lightning Down” has an overarchin­g positivity and celebratio­n of resilience.

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