
Atlantic Furies:
The Women Who Risked Everything to be the First to Fly
Atlantic Furies:
The Women Who Risked Everything to be the First to Fly
Overview
This is the astounding story of the six female aviators who battled to become the first woman to cross the Atlantic Ocean by plane.
In the early 20th century, the dream of crossing the Atlantic by air was as potent as putting a man on the moon would be 50 years later. But many people believed women too fragile and lacking in the skills to endure the gruelling conditions of flying long distances.
In Atlantic Furies,Midge Gillies uncovers the stories of Elsie Mackay, Lady Anne Savile, Frances Grayson, Ruth Elder, Amelia Earhart, and Mabel Boll. These courageous, rule-breaking aviators risked everything to prove that women could fly the Atlantic. Some had lied to their families in order not to be stopped, others duped the press about their intentions and, ultimately, three lost their lives, but each pushed the boundaries of the possible.
Atlantic Furies celebrates the bravery, panache, and drive of these trail-blazing aviators, who showed the world that it wasn’t just men who could conquer the skies.
Details
- Format
- Size
- Extent
- ISBN
- RRP
- Pub date
- Rights held
- Other rights
- Hardback
- 234mm x 153mm
- 416 pages
- 9781915590527
- GBP£25.00
- 23 October 2025
- UK & Commonwealth (ex. Can) + EU
- PEW Literary
Praise
‘The astounding stories of the first women aviators, who took to the skies in the 1920s — all of them intrepid, determined, and remarkably stylish.’
‘What a delightful book! Written with verve, Atlantic Furies cuts across all the categories and all our expectations of the women who, in the Roaring Twenties, broke that singular glass ceiling: the aviation cockpit. This is the deeply transatlantic and transcontinental story of the pathbreaking women, from all walks of life, who dared. We all know the story of Amelia Earhart. Now we know the story of her compatriots and competitors.’
About the Author
Midge Gillies specialises in writing books about history’s forgotten stories. Nicholas Lezard of The Guardian described her book about Prisoners of War, The Barbed-Wire University, as ‘one of the best war books I have ever read’ and The Mail on Sunday called her biography of pioneering pilot Amy Johnson ‘a riveting slice of social history’. Her book Piccadilly was praised by the TLS as ‘painstakingly researched and as busy as the Circus itself’. She has written or co-authored ten books and teaches creative writing at Cambridge University. She is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and was a Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Magdalene College, Cambridge, for three years. She has a PhD from the University of East Anglia and is married to award-winning crime writer, Jim Kelly. Her website is: https://midgegillies.com.