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Flight Of The Gin Fizz: Midlife At 4,500 Feet

Flight Of The Gin Fizz: Midlife At 4,500 Feet

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Author: Henry Kisor
Publisher: Basic Books
Category: Book

List Price: $25.00
Buy Used: $0.28
You Save: $24.72 (99%)



New (6) Used (39) Collectible (2) from $0.28

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 653039

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 384
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 7 x 1

ISBN: 0465024254
Dewey Decimal Number: 629.13092
EAN: 9780465024254
ASIN: 0465024254

Publication Date: August 22, 1997
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: The text is clean with some moderate exterior wear.

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Henry Kisor didn’t realize what he was getting himself into when a friend invited him aboard his small plane one afternoon, but as the engine revved and the craft took flight, he found himself exhilarated as never before. Fifty-three years old, Kisor had looked into a mirror and saw staring back ”a man who was short, fat, bald, bespectacled, and deaf.” He needed to reclaim his zest for life, and he found the answer in learning how to fly.Kisor’s dream begins to take shape when he learns that radio communications are not required in most of America’s airspace, and that ”visual flight rules” are the same for hearing and deaf pilots alike. With the eagerness of newfound youth, he throws himself into his lessons and plans a suitable maiden voyage: a reenactment of Cal Rodgers’s 1911 journey from New York to Los Angeles, the first coast-to-coast flight. Along the way, Kisor learns that Rodgers himself suffered from severe hearing loss, which adds an unexpected personal connection to the enterprise.Soon after getting his license, Kisor falls in love with a thirty-six-year-old beauty: a classic Cessna two-seater that he buys and renames Ginn Fizz, in honor of Rodgers’s Vin Fiz (which was itself named after a popular soft drink of the day). He then plans out his trip and invites the reader into the cockpit as he takes to the air, dodging storms and greasing landings on a journey across America that recalls the derring-do of the early days of aviation. Landing sixty-five times along a route that takes him from New York to Chicago to Texas to California, Kisor introduces us to the men and women who make up the ”brotherhood of aviation”—those who staff the airports, repair the planes, teach student pilots, ferry skydivers (and sometimes jump themselves), and perform aerobatic stunts —and who open a window onto a rich and charming side of American life and lore, but Flight of the Gin Fizz is an internal journey, too, as Kisor slowly shakes off the midlife blues that had led him to the Cessna’s left seat in the first place. As he proceeds west toward his goal, Kisor learns how to push the envelope of his own capacities, reaching new levels of proficiency and self-reliance, and stretching the limits of his familiar landbound life. For pilots, passengers, and armchair travelers of all stripes, Kisor offers an unforgettable voyage of self discovery and high adventure—and a new appreciation of life’s possibilities.



Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Refreshing GIn Fizz   July 22, 2007
As a middle-aged private pilot myself, I have all the respect and admiration in the world for both pilots who flew coast to coast in light aircraft.

Through out this book you will meet Henry Kisor, who is deaf, but who is trying desperately to communicate with not only himself through mid-life but also the outside world who has trouble accepting a deaf pilot. I found myself skimming over the historical recount of Roger's first coast-to-coast flight to catch up with Henry in his 150.

Henry paints the all to true, sad picture of today's general aviation. Yet he also highlight it's greatest joys. Namely, meeting other aviation nuts and seeing the world from a different vantage point.

After reading the book, I sincerely hope to one day meet Henry at a small GA airport and share a Diet Coke and a few stories. People like Henry are a main reason why I waste my hard earned money so foolishly boring $114 per hour holes in the sky.

The brotherhood of aviators is well shared by Henry's book and is a good read by fellow aviators.




3 out of 5 stars A Different Twist on Middle Age Angst   January 22, 2003
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Faced with late middle age and a life that has not quite provided all that youth expected, any number of males have taken to the open road and written about it -- most often, to my way of thinking, in a fairly whiny manner. This is a different twist on that theme; Kisor, a critic for a Chicago newspaper, doesn't take to the open road, he takes to the open sky in a small Cessna. And not just any open sky; it is the open sky which the nearly forgotten Cal Rodgers followed in the first solo flight across the United States. Coincidentally, Kisor and Rodgers share the handicap of being deaf. This all makes for a leisurely and instructive read on flying, on living deaf in a hearing world, and -- gently -- on growing older and finding the new satisfactions rather than the disappointments of that fact. Kisor's writing is not particularly gripping and his journey is mostly uneventful. Rodgers' trip was much different, plagued by all manner of equipment and crash problems, some of them triggered by his own aggressive and overconfident actions. Kisor's episodic retelling of that journey, based on an unpublished work by a woman he meets along his own route, is the best part of Flight.


4 out of 5 stars Flying low and slow gives the best views   October 18, 2001
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I enjoyed this book so much, I took my time reading it. As the author crossed the country slowly in a Cessna 152, he follows the path of Cal Rodgers (another deaf pilot) - and I followed the author slowly, limiting myself to a few chapters at a time, savoring them. While the author shared his observations about the places he went and the people he met, he also shared his his views as a deaf pilot and a deaf member of our society. It is this perspective that gives the greatest insights. He keeps running into people who "can't do something" because they are different. Women pilots, black pilots, pilots who are afraid of flying, deaf pilots. Fortunately, none of them listened (pun intended) to "them" and some great little stories about some fascinating individuals come out. I must confess I might have tried to limit some of these folks before I read this book - I hope this book has taught me to encourage them instead. I limited myself to four stars because this flight of self-discovery isn't quite in the league of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, but that's a high bar to meet.


5 out of 5 stars An excellent book for anyone thinking about learning to fly.   October 13, 1997
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

Although Henry Kisor writes about his transcontinental trip in a small trainer as a non-hearing pilot, there is a subtext. Anyone of any age who wonders what the world of general aviation is all about and harbors the desire to join its ranks should read this book. Sure, Henry's deafness makes his flight special, but it is his description of grass-roots aviation that makes this book a keeper. You won't recognize John Nance, Dale Brown, or Tom Clancy in its pages--not even Richard Bach--just a middle-aged guy in love with flying.

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