The Shepherd 

—De Havilland Vampire
The Shepherd is a novella about a 20 year old pilot who, on Christmas Eve 1957, set out from Lower Saxony, Germany to Blighty, UK to celebrate christmas with his family. Flying a De Havilland Vampire, a British jet fighter, he knew the flight time would take 66 minutes. After being airborne for 43 minutes, while out over the North Sea in the darkness of night, his plane suffers an electrical failure, taking out his compass and ten-channel radio set. The pilot has no way of contacting airforce personnel on the ground. The single seat Vampire could not be fitted with an ejector seat, making it almost impossible to bail out of. The pilot is frightened and devastated.
The pilot did two turns of the triangle manoeuvre and waited. Nothing happened. Nobody came. Distraught at this point, all sorts of things go through his mind.
He tries doing the last left turn, and again waits. By this time he has just 5 minutes of fuel left. He prepares himself for death.
The Shepherd is a short, 144 page novella written in 1975 by Frederick Forsyth, author of novels like The Day of the Jackal and The Odessa File. It is said he wrote The Shepherd for Christmas as a present for his wife.
Every year, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation broadcasts a reading of The Shepherd by Alan Maitland. Maitland passed away in 1999, but recordings of him reading The Shepherd are available, like this 32 minute reading on You Tube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j2_bLE...
This is a short, pleasant read / listen.
3.5* / 5
At only 120 pages, many of which are filled with rather moody (charcoal?) drawings of the aircraft featured, The Shepherd makes for a brisk read. A simple story of a Vampire pilot lost over the North Sea at Xmas, with a 'shepherd' aircraft to guide him home, this is very well-written as one might expect from Forsyth, engrossing and rather moody, lonely and seasonal too, but just lacked that little extra plot twist it needed to make it really enjoyable. 4/5
A powerful,haunting story which stayed in memory for a long time.A British pilot finds his aircraft malfunctioning during World War II. Will it crash or will someone or something steer him back to safety despite his dire predicament ?It is a very good description of fighter flying but the ending is unforgettable. To reveal that would be a spoiler but it gave me goosebumps.

Having never read Forsyth before (an author associated with the kind of best-selling thrillers that are translated onscreen into high octane testosterone-driven Hollywood movies raking in the buck), I hit the 'request' button for this quite impulsively on Netgalley (and partly out of curiosity I believe). Aaaaaand it has turned out to be exactly what the blurb advertises. Another obligatory tale of a Christmas miracle in which a young English pilot's life is saved by the ghost of a World War 2
A novella by Forsyth which is a quick read and much unlike his other works. There are sketches included as well. Read this if you get your hands on it. It won't take much of your time and the story is simple enough.
This is an intensely dramatic and wonderfully told short story about a young Royal Air Force (RAF) fighter pilot's struggle to make it home to the UK from West Germany in his DeHavilland Vampire jet fighter on the night of Christmas Eve 1957. Frederick Forsyth - one of my favorite writers - was himself at 20 the youngest fighter pilot in the RAF little more than 60 years ago - and his evocation of the sensation and perils of flight in a sleek and swift, single-engine jet fighter, puts the reader
It's a ghost story. It's a flying story. Forsyth, at this stage of his career, is in great storytelling mode. There's nothing about this story to dislike. Sparse, evocative and full of atmosphere. Recommended.
Frederick Forsyth
Paperback | Pages: 144 pages Rating: 3.87 | 2852 Users | 210 Reviews

Be Specific About Regarding Books The Shepherd
| Title | : | The Shepherd |
| Author | : | Frederick Forsyth |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 144 pages |
| Published | : | April 4th 1996 by Arrow (first published November 1975) |
| Categories | : | Fiction. Thriller. Holiday. Christmas. Historical. Historical Fiction. Short Stories. Adventure |
Representaion Supposing Books The Shepherd

—De Havilland Vampire
The Shepherd is a novella about a 20 year old pilot who, on Christmas Eve 1957, set out from Lower Saxony, Germany to Blighty, UK to celebrate christmas with his family. Flying a De Havilland Vampire, a British jet fighter, he knew the flight time would take 66 minutes. After being airborne for 43 minutes, while out over the North Sea in the darkness of night, his plane suffers an electrical failure, taking out his compass and ten-channel radio set. The pilot has no way of contacting airforce personnel on the ground. The single seat Vampire could not be fitted with an ejector seat, making it almost impossible to bail out of. The pilot is frightened and devastated.
"As the fighter slipped toward Norfolk the sense of loneliness gripped me tighter and tighter. All those things that had seemed so beautiful as I climbed away from the airfield now seemed my worst enemies. The stars were no longer impressive in their brilliance; I thought of their hostility, sparking away there in the timeless, lost infinities of endless space. The night sky, its stratospheric temperature fixed, night and day alike, at an unchanging fifty-six degrees below zero, became in my mind a limitless prison creaking with cold. Below me lay the worst of them all, the heavy brutality of the North Sea, waiting to swallow me and my plane and bury us for endless eternity in a liquid black crypt where nothing moved nor would ever move again. And no one would ever know."During his intensive training, the young pilot had learned that should he ever lose his radio and be unable to transmit his emergency, he should try to attract the attention of RAF radar scanners by adopting a triangle manoeuvre. This involved moving out to sea, then flying in small triangles, turning left, left, and left again, with each leg of the triangle being of a duration of two minutes' flying time. This manoeuvre should allow the air-traffic controller to spot the distressed aircraft and divert another aircraft to find it and bring it in. The rescue aircraft was called the Shepherd.
The pilot did two turns of the triangle manoeuvre and waited. Nothing happened. Nobody came. Distraught at this point, all sorts of things go through his mind.
He tries doing the last left turn, and again waits. By this time he has just 5 minutes of fuel left. He prepares himself for death.
"It's a bad thing, a sad thing, to die at twenty years of age, with your life unlived, and the worst thing of all is not the fact of dying but the fact of all the things never done."Then suddenly, to his right, he notices something. It's a De Havilland Mosquito fighter-bomber of World War II vintage. It worked! His shepherd has arrived. The young pilot is led back to a safe landing. But, who is the mysterious shepherd who brought this young pilot to safety on Christmas Eve 1957? All rational explanation fails, giving the story its surprise ending.
The Shepherd is a short, 144 page novella written in 1975 by Frederick Forsyth, author of novels like The Day of the Jackal and The Odessa File. It is said he wrote The Shepherd for Christmas as a present for his wife.
Every year, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation broadcasts a reading of The Shepherd by Alan Maitland. Maitland passed away in 1999, but recordings of him reading The Shepherd are available, like this 32 minute reading on You Tube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j2_bLE...
This is a short, pleasant read / listen.
3.5* / 5
Particularize Books Toward The Shepherd
| Original Title: | The Shepherd |
| ISBN: | 0099642514 (ISBN13: 9780099642510) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Setting: | RAF Minton(United Kingdom) |
Rating Regarding Books The Shepherd
Ratings: 3.87 From 2852 Users | 210 ReviewsCriticize Regarding Books The Shepherd
An aviation classicBy Charles van Buren on December 30, 2017Format: Kindle Edition|Verified PurchaseMany of the negative reviews of this novella are from people who claim that the book description did not state that this is a "short story.". I checked the Amazon descriptions for the e-book and the hard copies. All descriptions list the book as having either 123 or 129 pages. Others seriously complain that the book is not worth the price because it is short. Personally, I do not buy my literatureAt only 120 pages, many of which are filled with rather moody (charcoal?) drawings of the aircraft featured, The Shepherd makes for a brisk read. A simple story of a Vampire pilot lost over the North Sea at Xmas, with a 'shepherd' aircraft to guide him home, this is very well-written as one might expect from Forsyth, engrossing and rather moody, lonely and seasonal too, but just lacked that little extra plot twist it needed to make it really enjoyable. 4/5
A powerful,haunting story which stayed in memory for a long time.A British pilot finds his aircraft malfunctioning during World War II. Will it crash or will someone or something steer him back to safety despite his dire predicament ?It is a very good description of fighter flying but the ending is unforgettable. To reveal that would be a spoiler but it gave me goosebumps.

Having never read Forsyth before (an author associated with the kind of best-selling thrillers that are translated onscreen into high octane testosterone-driven Hollywood movies raking in the buck), I hit the 'request' button for this quite impulsively on Netgalley (and partly out of curiosity I believe). Aaaaaand it has turned out to be exactly what the blurb advertises. Another obligatory tale of a Christmas miracle in which a young English pilot's life is saved by the ghost of a World War 2
A novella by Forsyth which is a quick read and much unlike his other works. There are sketches included as well. Read this if you get your hands on it. It won't take much of your time and the story is simple enough.
This is an intensely dramatic and wonderfully told short story about a young Royal Air Force (RAF) fighter pilot's struggle to make it home to the UK from West Germany in his DeHavilland Vampire jet fighter on the night of Christmas Eve 1957. Frederick Forsyth - one of my favorite writers - was himself at 20 the youngest fighter pilot in the RAF little more than 60 years ago - and his evocation of the sensation and perils of flight in a sleek and swift, single-engine jet fighter, puts the reader
It's a ghost story. It's a flying story. Forsyth, at this stage of his career, is in great storytelling mode. There's nothing about this story to dislike. Sparse, evocative and full of atmosphere. Recommended.


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