Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Lot #42
Guy Gibson War-Dated Typed Letter Signed on His Autobiography, Enemy Coast Ahead, with Handwritten 'Book Title' List

"The Boys Die Young"—Dambusters leader Guy Gibson's handwritten list of possible titles for Enemy Coast Ahead, sent seven weeks before he was killed in action

Estimate: $10000+

The 30 Minute Rule begins June 10 at 7:00 PM EDT. An Initial Bid Must Be Placed By June 10 at 6:00 PM EDT To Participate After 6:00 PM EDT

Server Time: 5/19/2026 12:28:34 PM EDT
Sell a Similar Item?
Refer Collections and Get Paid

Description

"The Boys Die Young"—Dambusters leader Guy Gibson's handwritten list of possible titles for Enemy Coast Ahead, sent seven weeks before he was killed in action

The first Commanding Officer of the Royal Air Force's No. 617 Squadron (1918–1944), whose 'Dam Busters' raid in 1943 destroyed two large dams in the Ruhr area of Germany. He was awarded the Victoria Cross and, in June 1943, became the most highly decorated serviceman in the country. Gibson completed over 170 war operations before dying in action at the age of 26. World War II-dated TLS signed “Yours sincerely, Guy Gibson,” one page, 7 x 8.75, British Royal Air Force (RAF) emblem letterhead, August 1, 1944. Letter to literary agent Nancy R. Pearn, co-founder of the London firm Pearn, Pollinger & Higham, Ltd., which represented authors including Graham Greene, Paul Scott, and James Herriot. In full: “I have sent to-day by Registered Post the manuscript of the Book and I will ring up Geoffrey Harmsworth at Air Ministry and ask him if he will contact you so that he can get it through Security as quickly as possible. The illustrations for the book are partly in London and some are Crown Copyright Air Ministry photographs which I think I will try and wangle out of Geoffrey Harmsworth. I cannot seem to think of a good title for this Book, but on a separate bit of paper enclosed, I have put down a few suggestions.” Gibson adds the salutation in his own hand.

Included with the letter is the referenced enclosure, which contains a list of seven possible book titles penned in the hand of Gibson. The titles are as follows: “1. Four Years Lifetime. / 2. Flak – Fun – Fear. / 3. The Boys Die Young. / 4. Enemy Coast Ahead / 5. Eight Are Missing / 6. Reich Wreckers / 7. By Fire and By Water.” A pencil notation to the right, likely in the hand of Pearn, reads, “(A stock phrase?),” with a line extending to the title “Enemy Coast Ahead.” Annotated below: “Photo as frontispiece? (not the cover?).” The agent’s tentative aside stands in contrast to the title’s eventual fate: Enemy Coast Ahead would be retained and become one of the most recognizable memoirs of RAF Bomber Command. Read in hindsight, several of the discarded alternatives, most notably “The Boys Die Young," carry an unintended weight given the author’s fate only weeks later. In very good to fine condition, with folds, creases, and scattered foxing.

Written just seven weeks before his death in September 1944, the letter captures Gibson at the moment he was finalizing a personal account of his wartime service, selecting a title for a book he would not live to see published. By the summer of 1944, Wing Commander Guy Gibson, already renowned for leading the Dambusters raid, was serving in a staff role at RAF East Kirkby after completing multiple operational tours. Restless and eager to return to combat as Allied forces advanced following D-Day, he had resumed flying duties in July while assisting with operational planning at No. 55 Base. The day after writing this letter, he was posted to No. 54 Base at RAF Coningsby, where he continued to pursue limited operational flying amid concern that the war might end before he could fully return to action.

Enemy Coast Ahead is Gibson’s autobiographical account of his World War II service in RAF Bomber Command, written in 1944 when he was just 25 years old. Covering his career from the outbreak of war through 1943, including two full operational tours, night-fighter duty, and his leadership of Operation Chastise, the work stands as a firsthand narrative of the air war over Europe. Following Gibson’s death, the book was first serialized in the Sunday Express beginning in December 1944 and was published in book form by Michael Joseph in February 1946. Retaining the very title tentatively queried in this letter, it secured its place as a lasting account of RAF operations in World War II.

Auction Info






This item is Pre-Certified by PSA/DNA
Buy a third-party letter of authenticity for (inquire for price)

*This item has been pre-certified by a trusted third-party authentication service, and by placing a bid on this item, you agree to accept the opinion of this authentication service. If you wish to have an opinion rendered by a different authenticator of your choosing, you must do so prior to your placing of any bid. RR Auction is not responsible for differing opinions submitted 30 days after the date of the sale.

Third-party authentication service applies only to signatures and handwriting, and does not cover the addition of sketches, artwork, musical quotations, etc.