DG-Ag said:
As an aside...I'm listening to the book on Audible (haven't started watching yet) and in the early chapters they talk a lot about Curtis LeMay. They mention that the character in Dr. Strangelove, Col. Jack D. Ripper, was patterned loosely after LeMay. That piqued my interest so I watched Dr. Strangelove again last night. What a great movie that was (or at least to me). Numerous laugh-out-loud moments.
Apologize for the derail.
I just finished the book on Audible. It was fantastic. It really does a good job of breaking down all the moving parts to the European theater. So many things built on one another - and there were a lot of failed experiments on the path to finally overwhelming the Germans.
I think one of the things the casual viewer with this series may not realize is the book touches on a LOT of sub-topics. It's not just the Bloody 100th and their missions.
They get into the atmosphere of London during the war, racial tensions, the tug of war between commanders on how to utilize the 8th AF, the build-up to D-Day, the British 'terror bombing' early in the war as retaliation for the bombing of London, how strategic bombing evolved from small targets to finally hitting the German oil/rail/coal and industry, the "not so neutral" Swiss, the impact felt by German cities, the decisions of the 8th to gravitate toward city/suburban bombing, and the POW experiences - which were horrifying in some cases.
Band of Brothers had a fairly simple, straight-forward, story that followed one company of men. Masters of the Air has to cover A LOT more.
So I would say give the series a chance to set things up, that's a lot more difficult to do in just 9 episodes and you're simply not going to get the personal connections with the characters that you did with BOB.