Facebook X YouTube Instagram TikTok

Beaufighter (Hardback)

The Allies’ Multi-Role Combat Aircraft

Aviation > Aircraft Aviation > Pilots Aviation > Reference World History

By Edward Rippeth
Imprint: Air World
Pages: 256
Illustrations: 32 mono illustrations
ISBN: 9781036144692
Published: 30th August 2026

in_stock

£20.00 Introductory Offer

RRP £25.00

Note: If you have previously requested any release reminder emails for this product to the email address entered above, then the choice you make now about which format(s) of the product you wish to be reminded about will replace the choice you made last time.
You'll be £20.00 closer to your next £10.00 credit when you purchase Beaufighter. What's this?
+£4.99 UK Delivery or free UK delivery if order is over £40
(click here for international delivery rates)

Need a currency converter? Check XE.com for live rates



In many ways the Bristol Type 156 Beaufighter defined the modern multi-role combat aircraft. It was right in the thick of things at various critical turning points of the war, in every theatre.

Night fighter, anti-shipping strike aircraft, maritime air superiority fighter and ground attack weapons platform – the Beaufighter redefined every role it took on. This is despite the fact it was a hastily designed lash-up, a modestly performing oversized ‘heavy fighter’, which might easily have been parked with the Westland Whirlwind in obscurity.

Yet, as an aircraft it would prove to be the perfect platform that enabled a huge leap forward in the RAF’s night defences and Coastal Command’s anti-shipping patrols. It would also be one of Britain’s most successful exports of the war, both in its ability to perform in every theatre asked of it, and its key role with Allied air forces like the RAAF and even the USAAF, with which it served until the end of the war.

Through the exploits of many of its crews, Beaufighter explores how the aircraft was exactly what was needed, whether that was when it was realised that AI (airborne intercept) radar was key to winning the night air war and defeating the Blitz, shredding Axis logistics on land, sea and air in the Mediterranean, brutalising the Japanese army in the jungles of Burma and New Guinea, or smashing the Norwegian ore convoys which represented a life-line for Hitler’s Third Reich.

Intriguingly, the Beaufighter’s story does not end there, as the author explores the indirect, yet characteristically blunt, impact that this brute of an aircraft played on events as momentous as Indian independence and the Battle of Stalingrad.

This book tells the whole story of the Bristol Beaufighter – from a particularly overweight ugly duckling to one of the deadliest warbirds of the Second World War.

There are no reviews for this book. Register or Login now and you can be the first to post a review!

About Edward Rippeth

An international publisher and aviation history writer, EDWARD RIPPETH is a regular online writer and contributor to the leading aviation blog, HUSH-KIT. Over the years, he has amassed, curated and analysed information, sources and data on every aspect of the aerial battles of the Second World War.

Perfect Partner

Beaufighter and Mosquito Operations in WWII The Memoirs of a Radar Operator (Hardback)

Zbyšek Necas was just 18, and still a high school student, when he escaped from the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia a month before the outbreak of war in 1939. He managed to make his way to Britain where he had a cousin. Necas enlisted in the RAF in 1940, initially being posted as an interpreter at the Czech Depot. Some of his early duties involved the interrogation of captured German aircrew. He was, however, determined to fly. That wish came not as a pilot, but as a radar operator. In time, Necas was posted to 68 Squadron, which throughout the war had a large number of Czech exiles on its…

By Col Zbyšek Nečas-Pemberton

Click here to buy both titles for £36.25
Customers who bought this title also bought...

Other titles in Air World...