“This is a distinctive memoir. Because this work focuses on three brothers at war but also on the home front and what their family experienced, it gives the reader a wider lens through which to view Americans’ experiences in the war.”—Robert S. Ehlers Jr., author of The Mediterranean Air War: Airpower and Allied Victory in World War II
“Allison has provided much context concerning family history, as well as background for significant issues related to WWII. The context provided for the personal letters is nearly always well timed, well placed, and vital to the impact of the letters. The way Allison dealt with the letters related to Oscar's shootdown and imprisonment is to be commended, and the way he introduced the letters related to Wiley’s death and subsequent search for answers is quite moving.”—Kelly Crager, author of Hell under the Rising Sun: Texan POWs and the Building of the Burma-Thailand Death Railway
“Fred Allison shares his family’s World War II experiences with the skilled analysis of a professional historian. Based on a surviving uncle’s memoire of the war, and the quest to learn of another uncle who never returned, Allison guides us through family letters, interviews, and the history of the period - the “Good War” and its effect on the Homefront. My Darling Boys is a moving and personal insight of those who served, and their families who waited for them to come home.” —Gene B. Preuss, public historian, University of Houston-Downtown
“The Darling Boys were the quintessential young men of America who went off to fight in World War II. In this very sweet tale, Fred Allison, a preeminent military historian, weaves family legends, memoirs, and war letters together with deep historical and archival research into a compelling narrative of three young Depression-era members of the Allison family as they became combat aviators and served in the European theater. His research is masterful, and the personal narratives are enriching. It is a great story of aerial combat in that war, the travail of those who waited at home, and the role of American families in supplying us with those heroic young warriors. This book is an enjoyable, touching, and first-class read and reminds us of the human costs of war—both for the warriors who go forth into battle and for those who wait for them at home.” —Colonel (ret.) Darrel Whitcomb, combat veteran and military historian
"Rescued from obscurity and a welcome contribution to the growing library of World War II histories and biographies, My Darling Boys: A Family at War, 1941-1947 is an extraordinary accomplishment and unreservedly recommended."--Midwest Book Review
"This is a compelling story of the cost of war, told through the wartime experiences of three brothers from New Mexico who flew in World War II. . . . Allison shows the reader that wartime flying was glamorous and exciting, terrifying and deadly. The reader learns firsthand about life in the USAAF on the ground and in the air, in training as well as combat, not to mention a lesson in what it was like to be a POW in Germany."--Journal of America's Military Past
"The description of the training each [brother] received is unique and seldom seen in such depth in aviation histories and will be a real find for many readers, particularly in Wiley’s fighter-pilot training. . . . I’ve never seen such a book, so deeply felt, written by an author so strongly attached to a family going through one of the greatest upheavals in world history, living through their individual roles with such great love and concern for others wherever they might be."--Journal of the Air Force Historical Foundation
"[In] this captivating story, My Darling Boys, we learn how it was that three sons from one farm family in the Pecos River Valley of eastern New Mexico near Hagerman at the outbreak of World War II decided to fly fighter planes for the Army Air Forces than work in a nearby factory."--ARGunners
"Overall, this is an excellent book for those interested in the air war in Europe. Through the clever use of family sources and official records, Allison uses these three men to give some insight into how the air war in Europe affected the young men who fought and died in the skies above Europe, while also providing some insight into how their struggles abroad affected their families back in the United States and Texas."--Southwestern Historical Quarterly