Born in 1916, after learning to fly as a civilian, Ian Richard Gleed was granted a RAF commission in 1936. He completed training on Christmas Day that year, being posted to 46 Squadron which was equipped with the Gloster Gauntlet. Through much of his RAF service the diminutive Gleed was known as โWidgeโ, short for โWizard Midgetโ on account of his excessive use of the word โwizardโ to describe something โtopperโ, and his short stature. Rising from Flight to Squadron Commander in short order, and later taking over the Ibsley Spitfire Wing in 1941, Gleed was enormously popular with his peers. Indeed, Wing Commander โBunnyโ Currant once described Gleed as a โpocket-sized man with care for others and courage beyond compareโ. Having been decorated with the coveted โdoubleโ of both DSO and DFC, Wing Commander Gleed went out to lead a wing in Tunisia. It was there that he was shot down and killed on 16 April 1943. By this time, he had achieved the status of being a fighter Ace, having been credited with the destruction of thirteen enemy aircraft. The previous year, Gleedโs wartime memoir, Arise to Conquer, was published by Victor Gollancz. Eloquently written and detailed, this book is a superb first-hand account of one manโs life and times as a fighter pilot โ mainly flying the Hawker Hurricane โ during the Fall of France, the Battle of Britain and beyond into the night Blitz. Reprinted here in its entirety, and extensively introduced by the renowned aviation historian Dilip Sarkar MBE, FRHistS, this edition of Arise to Conquer is supported by a remarkable set of wartime images. Among Gleedโs Hurricane pilots on 87 Squadron during the Battle of Britain and beyond was Sergeant Laurence โRubberโ Thorogood, a keen photographer who is often mentioned in this book. Along with his Commanding Officerโs words, Rubberโs unique personal photograph album, containing as it does a number of images of Gleed, provides a rare glimpse of a fighter squadron at war during our Darkest โ yet Finest โ Hour.