The Saturday Evening Post

This Is It!

All over the south of England, on the night of June 5, 1944, people awoke and went outside to listen. They had become used to noisy nights. The noise had changed through the past four years, from the distinctive beat of German bombers and the din of air raids, to the sound of British bombers outward bound at dusk and homeward bound at dawn. But people who heard the noise on the fifth of June remember it as different from anything that had ever been heard before. As they listened that night, with increasing excitement and pride, they knew that the greatest fleet of aircraft they had ever heard — the greatest fleet that anyone had ever heard — was passing overhead from north

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Saturday Evening Post

The Saturday Evening Post8 min read
The 150th Running Of The Kentucky derby
Meriwether Lewis Clark Jr. surveyed the racing grounds in front of him with admiration. It was 1872, and the Grand Prix de Paris was in full swing at the Hippodrome de Longchamp, Paris's newest racetrack. Near the starting gate were gathered some of
The Saturday Evening Post3 min read
Think Fresh
When I think about late spring and early summer, I think green — as in asparagus, leeks, broccoli, and spinach. And there's no place like your local farmers market to load up on freshly picked produce at its peak of flavor and nutrition. I love a fri
The Saturday Evening Post8 min read
Flamenco
The guitarist strummed a lively Spanish flamenco tune in a rapid rush of notes as his fingers flew across the strings. Next to him, the male singer began the cante, the song, which is the essence of the art form. His deep melodic voice conveyed a ful

Related Books & Audiobooks