Derek Robinson

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Derek Robinson (born 1932) is a British author best known for his military aviation novels full of black humour. He was nominated for the Booker Prize in 1971 for his first novel, Goshawk Squadron. Robinson served in the Royal Air Force as a fighter plotter.

Novels set in squadrons of the Royal Flying Corps (later the Royal Air Force) during the First World War:

Novels set in RAF squadrons during the Second World War:

Novels about spying during the Second World War:

  • Kramer's War (1977)
  • The Eldorado Network (1979)
  • Artillery of Lies (1991)

Other books include:

  • Invasion, 1940 (2005), a non-fiction work about World War II which aims to debunk "two powerful myths": first, that the RAF alone prevented an invasion of Great Britain by Hitler's Germany; and second, that such an invasion force would inevitably have conquered Britain.
  • Kentucky Blues (2002), about life in a nineteenth-century American town.
  • Rotten with Honour (1973), about Cold War-espionage.
  • Rugby: A Player's Guide to the Laws
  • Red Rag Blues (2006), about espionage and the McCarthy witchhunts in 1950's America.
  • Better Rugby Refereeing (2007), co-authored with Ed Morrison.

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