Review
"If you read just one book on the history of NASA make it this one. You will not be disappointed."
Dr. David Baker
Editor,
Jane's Space Directory--NASA: The Complete Illustrated History (jacket cover, paperback edition)
"As a single-volume history of US space exploration, this volume is unmatched. [I]t provides compulsive reading to anyone even vaguely interested in the subject."
Denis J. Calvert
--Aircraft Illustrated (U.K.)
"If you want a well-illustrated and authoritative account of NASA's rise to become the world's biggest space agency, then this is the book for you."
Will Gator
--Focus Magazine (British Broadcasting Corporation)
"Space fans will adore
NASA: The Complete Illustrated History, a superbly produced record by Michael Gorn."
Clive Cookson
--The Financial Times of London
"Michael Gorn's Illustrated History is sure to elicit emotion from its readers. [I]t is filled with the triumphs and tragedies that define [NASA's] conquest of the heavens."
David Tytell
--Sky and Telescope
An engaging volume on the space age - it will appeal to the general reader and specialist alike - VON HARDESTY NATIONAL AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM A wonderful publication, dealing with probably the greatest period of technological development in the human race - AMERICAN STUDIES TODAY
From the Author
The two versions of NASA: The Complete Illustrated History--the original hardbound (2005) and updated paperback (2008)--represent publishing ventures unlike any others I have experienced. The previous six books I had written were standard history books of 200 to 500 pages, each one with one or two clustered picture "galleries" of about 25 images each. But the pictures in these sections do not really illustrate these books, as much as they identify persons and places mentioned in the narrative.
One historian friend who had already written several illustrated histories (and liked doing them) warned me that they would be different. He was right. The contract I signed with Merrell Publishers provided for a picture editor to help narrow down the vast choices, and she was excellent. But in the end I had to guide her towards the subjects I planned to cover, and after she presented me with about 1,500 images, I had to reduce them down to the 500 set forth in the publishing contract. Meanwhile, I was contractually obligated for 80,000 words of text--the main narrative plus captions. This may sound like a lot, but it would make a small book with the pictures subtracted. At any rate, the process of choosing subjects that lent themselves to photographic representation, and then writing about them, resulted in a left brain-right brain partnership unique in my experience. I honestly felt more like a movie director than an historian. I caught on to this (for me) new way of communicating the past about a third of the way through the hardbound version. Once I got the hang of it, I really enjoyed it.
One other curious aspect of the two NASA books occurred to me. That involved the physical separation between the author, publisher, and printer. They were separated not just by miles or even continents, but by oceans. The author was located in the Western U.S., the publisher in London, U.K., and the printers in the Far East. Had I been working on a standard history book, this not too novel insight would have crossed my mind, and then left it. But given the logistical feats necessary to produce an illustrated book, I found it hard to see how it could turn out right. How could words, pictures, captions, and overall design be integrated successfully with the main parties scattered across the world, unable to meet live? To my surprise, the final, published books proved that it can work, so long as the electronic and telephonic lines of communication are open, the PDF files flow, and the occasional page proofs in hard copy get overnighted.
I hope you will enjoy turning the pages of NASA: The Complete Illustrated History, whether hardbound or paperback. They constitute the most pleasurable publishing experiences I have had to date (with one exception: a third illustrated history I published with Merrell entitled, Superstructures in Space: From Satellites to Space Stations, A Guide to What's Out There (2008)). In some ways, I take greater pride in these books than in any of my others.
Michael Gorn