I can recommend the USAF Interceptors book previously mentioned.
And two others:
Northrop F-89 Scorpion: A Photo Chonicle by Marty J Isham and David R. McLaren Lockheed F-94 Starfire: A Photo Chonicle by the same authors. Both published by Schiffer.
Oddly, neither book gives you what most readers would expect, a detailed nut and bolt description of the aircraft's genesis, design and testing (although the F-94 gives you about 20 pages or what you might expect to find in an old Wings or Airpower magazine artice). Instead, both focus on the operational history of the jets with a squadron by squadron breakdown of ADC units, Alaska and the NEAC, and ANG units. The F-94 book also gives details of Korean war operations. They gives details and name names that only could have come from the official squadron histories. Still, they're both readable.
If you want to learn about the F-84 in ADC service, there is a 10 page history of it in Republic F-84 A Photo Chonicle by David R. McLaren. Also published by Schiffer. It follows the format of the other two books but unlike the Scorpion book, gives you a developmental history. But since the straight-wing F-84s weren't used a great deal by ADC, the type's interceptor use doen't get a lot of mention.
_________________ Remember the vets, the wonderful planes they flew and their sacrifices for a future many of them did not live to see. Note political free signature. I figure if you wanted my opinion on items unrelated to this forum, you'd ask for it.
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