Book Reviews

Atlantic Furies

By Midge Gillies

Scribe £20

Review by Anne Sebba, The Telegraph, 13th October 2025

Atlantic Furies

The heroines who raced to conquer the Atlantic (and often died trying)

These daring women ‘risked everything’ to be the first to fly the gruelling, 3,000-mile journey

In May 1927, Charles Lind­bergh made the first solo non-stop transat­lantic flight. He trav­elled from New York to Paris, through icy fog and deep fatigue. It took him over 33 hours. Spurred on by Lind­bergh’s feat, sev­eral women in Bri­tain and Amer­ica wanted to prove that it wasn’t just men who could endure that gruelling, lonely, 3,000-mile jour­ney: whether it was as pilots or pas­sen­gers, they could do it too.

Frances Grayson was one such pion­eer. She was 35, with a failed mar­riage and sev­eral abort­ive careers behind her. Two days before Christ­mas 1927, amid dis­astrous weather warn­ings, she and a crew of three men – pilot, engin­eer, radio oper­ator – took off from Long Island. Aim­ing for a first stop on New­found­land, the team flew north-east over Cape Cod and headed out to sea. They were never seen again.

As the social his­tor­ian Midge Gil­lies writes in Atlantic Fur­ies, her detailed and enjoy­able sur­vey of “the women who risked everything to be the first to fly”, Grayson’s “final moments must have been hor­rific… [and] plunging into the icy sea bey­ond ter­ri­fy­ing.” The avi­AT­LANTIC atrix had left a state­ment to be read in the event of her death. Her motive appeared to have been merely the determ­in­a­tion that her life amount to something – “or I become a little nobody”.

Grayson’s loss did little to deter other women. For, as Gil­lies bril­liantly con­veys, fly­ing long-dis­tance – and doing it, even­tu­ally, solo – wasn’t simply about the thrills and risks involved in con­quer­ing the ele­ments. For women in the 1920s, transat­lantic flight was also about rising above their situ­ation in life, avoid­ing bore­dom by seek­ing adven­ture, and, just as the suf­fra­gettes were doing in the Brit­ish polit­ical sphere, prov­ing the need for equal­ity.

Ladies who launch: pioneering aviators Frances Grayson, Elsie Mackay and Mabel Boll

Ladies who launch: pioneering aviators Frances Grayson, Elsie Mackay and Mabel Boll

Such flights were ardu­ous. They involved long hours of con­cen­tra­tion, often in freez­ing and noisy con­di­tions. The smal­lest lapse could prove fatal. The fuel needed to cross an ocean was so heavy it threatened to destabil­ise the plane. Given the length of the jour­ney and lack of places to stop, cof­fee was wel­comed, though since it was almost impossible for women to urin­ate dur­ing a flight, Gil­lies spec­u­lates that they prob­ably resor­ted to adult nap­pies.

It wasn’t easy for female avi­at­ors to find teach­ers, or hus­bands who would allow their spouses to fly in any role. If a woman was able to gain exper­i­ence, it was prob­ably by under­tak­ing short flights that involved the aid of land­marks, not fly­ing solely by instru­ments –

which the Atlantic cross­ing, over so much fea­ture­less water, would demand. It’s per­haps unsur­pris­ing, then, that the “Fur­ies” of Gil­lies’s title – six women who were determ­ined to cross the ocean in 1927 and 1928 – accu­mu­lated at least 15 mar­riages between them, and struggled to be taken ser­i­ously in what Gil­lies calls the “testoster­onesoaked world of fly­ing”.

Many such would-be pilots didn’t have fin­an­cial resources of their own; they needed back­ers to pay for the machinery and crew. Lady Anne Savile was a wealthy widow and fly­ing enthu­si­ast; when she attemp­ted the flight (as a pas­sen­ger) in August 1927, neither she nor her two male crew made it. The Hon Elsie Mackay, a former act­ress and jockey, was 35 in March 1928 when she attemp­ted the east-west cross­ing, but she did so in secret, hop­ing this would pre­vent her fam­ily from try­ing to stop her. Her plane, Endeav­our, like­wise van­ished.

One pivotal char­ac­ter in Gil­lies’s book is Amy Guest, a wealthy Amer­ican and mother-of-three. She’d grown up as a tom­boy with an adven­tur­ous spirit and hoped to become the first female transat­lantic pilot her­self, but she was talked out of that in favour of sup­port­ing another ama­teur: Amelia Ear­hart. Guest duly ploughed mil­lions into sup­port­ing Ear­hart’s quest. By early 1928, six months after Grayson’s dis­aster, Ear­hart was mak­ing ser­i­ous plans and vying for the achieve­ment with Mabel Boll, a bar­tender’s daugh­ter who’d mar­ried a wealthy busi­ness­man and was renowned for wear­ing as many as 33 dia­mond brace­lets on one arm.

On June 3 1928, in Boston, Ear­hart climbed aboard her Fok­ker F.VIIb Tri-Motor (named Friend­ship). Her pilot was Bill Stultz; the co-pilot was Slim Gor­don. Ear­hart wedged her­self into a cramped seat behind the pair, next to some addi­tional fuel tanks, and they took off. After stop­ping in New­found­land, where they spent two weeks groun­ded by bad weather – Boll and her crew were already on the island, stuck in the same pos­i­tion – they took their chance, and lif­ted off again, head­ing east. After 20 hours and 40 minutes, they safely landed in Burry Port, south Wales, mak­ing Ear­hart the first woman to fly across the Atlantic.

The last leg of Friend­ship’s jour­ney took it from Burry Port to Southamp­ton, where Ear­hart was mobbed as if she had been the one at the con­trols. She dis­avowed all the praise, call­ing her­self “bag­gage”; but she was a bud­ding pilot her­self, and hav­ing now wit­nessed what was involved, she couldn’t rest until she made the flight solo. In 1931 she mar­ried the pub­lisher George Put­nam, a dec­ade older than her, set­ting him the con­di­tion that she be free to pur­sue her career. He was sup­port­ive, see­ing the pub­lish­ing oppor­tun­it­ies in Ear­hart’s feats. In May 1932, five years after Lind­bergh’s his­toric flight, she suc­ceeded.

Then, on 1 June 1937, Ear­hart and her nav­ig­ator, Fred Noonan, attemp­ted to fly around the world. After trav­el­ling over the con­tin­ental US, down through the Carib­bean and South Amer­ica, to Africa and across most of Asia, they reached New Guinea on June 29. They took off again on July 2, in deteri­or­at­ing weather, after which Ear­hart was never seen again. She was declared leg­ally dead in 1939; the­or­ies about her death con­tinue to this day, not least on account of the dis­cov­ery of bones and some items of cloth­ing on the vol­canic atoll of Niku­maroro.

Even if Ear­hart failed in one sense, she suc­ceeded in another. Her mys­ter­i­ous, unsolved death has fixed her place in the pub­lic ima­gin­a­tion as a woman who per­man­ently changed the per­cep­tions of what women could achieve – and not just in fly­ing. As Gil­lies’s book makes abund­antly clear, the “Atlantic Fur­ies” had to fight relent­lessly; their goal as to have what women could do, if given a chance. And yet, today, there are still rel­at­ively low num­bers of women in the avi­ation indus­tries: fewer than eight per­cent of private pilots are women; Ear­hart and co were trail­blazers – but almost 90 years on, women are a long way from dom­in­at­ing the skies.

Read the review on The Telegraph website