âFighter pilots tell the greatest stories and the great ones tell the best stories of allâŚâ
âPAT CONROY, bestselling author of The Great Santini and The Death of Santini
âThis book is not only among the finest war writing ever but, like Viktor Franklâs Manâs Search for Meaning, Solitary sits alongside the most profound reflections on the resilience and capacity of the human soul.â
âSTEVEN PRESSFIELD, bestselling author of The Lionâs Gate and The War of Art
Solitary is a gutsy story of one manâs survival, endurance, and strength of willâŚâ
âLARRY ALEXANDER, bestselling co-author of A Higher Call
âI anxiously await the day my own sons are old enough to read it.â
âRICH COHEN, bestselling author of Tough Jews
âYou will tear through this bookâŚâ
âRYAN HOLLIDAY, bestselling author of The Obstacle is the Way
âIt grabs you immediately, and doesnât let go until youâre finished.â
âTUCKER MAX, bestselling author of I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell
âA magnificent triumph of the human spiritâŚI was captivated from the first page to the last.â
âSEAN PARNELL, bestselling author of Outlaw Platoon
Giora Romm was the Israeli Air Force's first fighter ace. As a twenty-two-year-old lieutenant he shot down five MiGs during the Six Day War of 1967.
Fourteen months later over the Nile Delta, an Egyptian missile exploded beneath the tail of his Mirage IIIC. Within moments Romm found himself hanging by the straps of his parachute, with a broken arm and a leg shattered in a dozen places, looking down from 10,000 feet. Streams of farmers and field workers converged below onto the spot toward which his chute was descending, with the intention, he was certain, of hacking him to death as soon as his feet touched the earth.
No other Israeli pilot had survived capture in Egypt or in any other Arab state.
Solitary is Romm's story of his imprisonment, torture, interrogation, release, and return to service.
Solitary is not a "war book." It's not a tale of heroism, though if anyone ever qualified for that distinction, it is this story's author. Solitary is not even, in its deepest parts, about captivity or imprisonment.
Solitary is about Romm's inner war.
It's the story, in his phrase, "of a fall from a great height," not only literally but metaphorically.
Romm could not tell his captors the truth about who he was or what he had done. He had to invent an entire fictional biography and keep it straight in his head through months of beatings and interrogations, all the while being held in solitary confinement with his body sheathed from chest to toe in a plaster cast.
Solitary is not a grim book. It's full of wry humor, keen self-observations and revelations.
An ordeal such as Romm endured is a sojourn in hell, but it is also a passage. Romm fell, and he came back. Solitary is his indelible account of confronting, as few of us ever will, his own fears and limitations, and discovering, ultimately, his capacity to survive and to prevail.
âFrom the Introduction by Steven Pressfield
âFighter pilots tell the greatest stories and the great ones tell the best stories of allâŚâ
âPAT CONROY, bestselling author of The Great Santini and The Death of Santini
âThis book is not only among the finest war writing ever but, like Viktor Franklâs Manâs Search for Meaning, Solitary sits alongside the most profound reflections on the resilience and capacity of the human soul.â
âSTEVEN PRESSFIELD, bestselling author of The Lionâs Gate and The War of Art
Solitary is a gutsy story of one manâs survival, endurance, and strength of willâŚâ
âLARRY ALEXANDER, bestselling co-author of A Higher Call
âI anxiously await the day my own sons are old enough to read it.â
âRICH COHEN, bestselling author of Tough Jews
âYou will tear through this bookâŚâ
âRYAN HOLLIDAY, bestselling author of The Obstacle is the Way
âIt grabs you immediately, and doesnât let go until youâre finished.â
âTUCKER MAX, bestselling author of I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell
âA magnificent triumph of the human spiritâŚI was captivated from the first page to the last.â
âSEAN PARNELL, bestselling author of Outlaw Platoon
Giora Romm was the Israeli Air Force's first fighter ace. As a twenty-two-year-old lieutenant he shot down five MiGs during the Six Day War of 1967.
Fourteen months later over the Nile Delta, an Egyptian missile exploded beneath the tail of his Mirage IIIC. Within moments Romm found himself hanging by the straps of his parachute, with a broken arm and a leg shattered in a dozen places, looking down from 10,000 feet. Streams of farmers and field workers converged below onto the spot toward which his chute was descending, with the intention, he was certain, of hacking him to death as soon as his feet touched the earth.
No other Israeli pilot had survived capture in Egypt or in any other Arab state.
Solitary is Romm's story of his imprisonment, torture, interrogation, release, and return to service.
Solitary is not a "war book." It's not a tale of heroism, though if anyone ever qualified for that distinction, it is this story's author. Solitary is not even, in its deepest parts, about captivity or imprisonment.
Solitary is about Romm's inner war.
It's the story, in his phrase, "of a fall from a great height," not only literally but metaphorically.
Romm could not tell his captors the truth about who he was or what he had done. He had to invent an entire fictional biography and keep it straight in his head through months of beatings and interrogations, all the while being held in solitary confinement with his body sheathed from chest to toe in a plaster cast.
Solitary is not a grim book. It's full of wry humor, keen self-observations and revelations.
An ordeal such as Romm endured is a sojourn in hell, but it is also a passage. Romm fell, and he came back. Solitary is his indelible account of confronting, as few of us ever will, his own fears and limitations, and discovering, ultimately, his capacity to survive and to prevail.
âFrom the Introduction by Steven Pressfield