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Saturday, February 3, 2018

A book review: QF32 by Richard Champion de Crespigny

In 2009, Captain Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger and his crew landed a severely damaged Airbus A320 on the Hudson River. All 155 passengers survived with only minor injuries. It was a miracle in the history of aviation. Do you know, there exists an equally miraculous incident in Australia's Qantas airline?

Indeed, in 2010, Captain Richard Champion de Crespigny and his crew landed a heavily damaged Airbus A380 (Qantas Flight 32) at Singapore Changi airport. The captain and his crew saved the lives of 440 souls onboard the aeroplane. For the first time, the story behind this miracle is told in a book called QF32. My book club selected this book for our January reading.

Aside from the story about Qantas Flight 32, this book is also a biography for Captain de Crespigny. The first half of the book provided an overview for Captain de Crespigny's early life until he became a captain at Qantas airline. I was surprised to discover, Captain de Crespigny once started a successful IT company called Aeronaut Industries. In fact, when my colleague saw me reading this book, we had a chat about it, where my colleague mentioned he once purchased a software from Captain de Crespigny's company (my colleague still has a receipt signed by the man himself). Speaking of coincidences!

After reading the first half of QF32, I thought Captain de Crespigny is a multi-talented man with fascinating life experiences. However, that was only half of the book. The second half was where the drama of Qantas Flight 32 unfolds. I liked the narrations in this book; it was fact driven, fast-paced, and it also provided blow-by-blow accounts for the incident. While the narratives contained technical information, but I opine, the readers don't need to be experts of aviation to understand the technical details in the book. In other words, if you have read Andy Weir's The Martian and the technical terms in that book didn't bother you, then you will be fine with QF32 also.

If you end up reading QF32, then make sure to read the appendix section. This is where Captain de Crespigny attached the damage assessment report for Qantas Flight 32. The damage to the aircraft was catastrophic! I was amazed, at how the captain and his crew were able to land the plane at all. I think the story in QF32 shows that when you have good, responsible people who know what they are doing, then even the worst disaster can be salvaged to save valuable human lives.

I recommend QF32. This is an incredible story. If you like the movie, Sully, then you are likely to enjoy this book too.








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