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The Race : The Complete True Story of How America Beat Russia to the Moon
 
 
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The Race : The Complete True Story of How America Beat Russia to the Moon [Paperback]

James Schefter (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 5, 2000
"Indispensable to anyone interested in the space race."--Houston Chronicle

In 1963, a young reporter for Time-Life named James Schefter was given a dream job: cover America's race to the moon.  Since the astronauts were under contract to Life for their stories, Schefter was given complete access to the biggest players at NASA.  But at the time, his primary role was to excite the public about the new, expensive, experimental space program, and he couldn't write about everything he saw.  In The Race, he does.

From drunken astronaut escapades to near disasters to ferocious political battles, the race to the moon was anything but the smooth process it appeared.  There were vicious fights between the engineers, feuds and practical jokes, near-fatal accidents, and dozens of brave, smart, and colorful characters pulling off the greatest exploration in the history of humankind. Like Undaunted Courage and D-Day, this is a tale of achieving the extraordinary against extraordinary odds.  As incredible as the "official" story of the space program is, the true, behind-the-scenes tale is more thrilling, more entertaining, and ultimately more ennobling.  

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The Race : The Complete True Story of How America Beat Russia to the Moon + Epic Rivalry: The Inside Story of the Soviet and American Space Race + Red Moon Rising: Sputnik and the Hidden Rivalries that Ignited the Space Age
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

When young Jim Schefter was a stringer for the Houston Chronicle and later Life magazine, he scored the plum reporting assignment of the 1960s--close-up coverage of the tense, heady race to space between the Americans and the Soviets. That pivotal decade in space exploration gave us near misses, giddy victories, and tragic failures that are hard to even imagine now as we yawn at the ubiquitous "routine shuttle launch." But the space race back then was deadly serious stuff: America's best and brightest scientists were teamed up with bold cowboy astronauts to win what was then seen as the most visible, most crucial battle in the cold war. And Jim Schefter--thanks to an exclusive contract Life had inked with the astronauts and their families--sat front-row center, from the earliest launches on to Neil Armstrong's hastily composed words as he stepped off the Eagle.

Armed with copious notes, reams of NASA and Soviet documents, and countless closed-door, at times embarrassing anecdotes, Schefter recounts the tit-for-tat one-upmanship of those early days in The Race, going as far back as the post-WWII grab for Nazi rocket technology (Schefter reveals that many joked at the time that the U.S.-Soviet race was being conducted by the Germans--"our Germans versus their Germans"). Schefter ably conveys the era's tension and exhilaration, jumping back and forth between the U.S. and Russian teams with smart, Superfriends pacing (think "meanwhile, back at the Hall of Justice..."), while also offering up solid historical and technical context and many uncomfortably funny asides (including stories about masturbating space monkeys and drunken astronauts out to stud). --Paul Hughes --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Thirty years after the U.S. reached the Moon, taking a space race lead from which it would never look back, Schefter comes along to do the looking back. The author, who covered the space race for Time-Life and the Houston Chronicle, transmits colorfully and authoritatively the subtle infighting among the astronauts, the complex nature of lesser-known people like manned-flight champion Bob Gilruth, and the American leaders struggling with military, scientific and public relations concerns. Readers are transported inside the satellite where Enos the monkey becomes frustrated after an electrical malfunction, and taken to a cocktail party where the virtues of a large command center are hashed out. Schefter also gives ample scrutiny to various Russians, documenting the courage of cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space, the braggadocio of Soviet powerhouse Khrushchev and the leadership of Sergei Korolev, father of the Soviet space program. Schefter consistently waxes patriotic and at times veers into the arcane ("tumble runs rotated the pod every two seconds, throwing the astronaut inside from positive to negative g's with each rotation"), but he tells an engrossing tale filled with fascinating bits of triviaAhe describes how Alan Shepard and Bill Dana pulled a practical joke on Wally Schirra by submerging his pleasure boat. Most importantly, however, Schefter deploys an expert grasp of narrative to escalate the excitement even as he informs. His book is an excellent choice for anyone who wants to relive the historic period of the space raceAor for those learning about it for the first time. (June)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Anchor (July 5, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385492545
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385492546
  • Product Dimensions: 5.2 x 0.8 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,468,844 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
 (2)
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

40 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars An error-filled, poorly-sourced re-tread, July 24, 2000
By 
Dwayne A. Day (Vienna, VA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Race : The Complete True Story of How America Beat Russia to the Moon (Paperback)
On the back cover of this book is a photograph of the author, James Schefter. Arms crossed over his chest, wearing dark sunglasses, he stares at the photographer in what is apparently intended to be a macho pose. He is wearing a dark polo shirt with the NASA "Meatball" emblem patch over the left breast. This is rather odd. James Schefter is a journalist. Why is he dressed like a tough-guy astronaut? What is even stranger is that below the NASA patch is embroidered the name of this book, "The Race." What kind of author goes out and has the name of his book embroidered on a shirt, especially before that book has been printed?

The Race is a deeply-flawed, error-filled book that adds nothing to our understanding of the space race. Schefter was a journalist with both Time and Life magazines during the 1960s. As such, he got to hang around with some of the astronauts and other NASA officials. He bills this book as the "uncensored" account of that epic undertaking. But by this mostly what he means is that it includes some stories of astronauts getting drunk and cheating on their wives. Many of these more ribald tales are not totally believable. Some of them don't seem physically possible. One story is that sometimes 3 or 4 women would line up in the hallway outside an astronaut's hotel room, waiting for their "turn" with him. This stud service tale and many others have the air of stories told around a poker table over too many beers--about as believable as the story about the fish that got away. While the astronauts were not saints, as Tom Wolfe proved two decades ago (in what remains the best astronaut book ever written), Schefter's stories don't ring true.

Schefter exhibits many of the flaws of a journalist trying to write history. In short, he does not let facts get in the way of a good story. The book is riddled with numerous errors, many of which are relatively minor, but all of which indicate that Schefter is a sloppy and lazy writer.

For instance, the Vanguard satellite did not have "primitive photo-cells" that took an image of the earth. The Saturn I did not have a single F-1 engine and the F-1 engine produced 1.5, not 1.3 million pounds of thrust. "Escape velocity" is not 17,500 miles per hour. And the X-15 rocket plane was not dropped from the belly of a B-29; it was dropped from the wing of a B-52. He was obviously thinking of the movie The Right Stuff and its depiction of the X-1. You have to wonder about an author who seems to take his cues from movie versions of events.

One of his bigger errors concerns his account of the July 1969 explosion of the Soviet N-1 moon rocket. Schefter says that American spy satellites photographed the rocket on the pad just before the launch. Not true. More importantly, he says that when it exploded, it killed 100 people. Also not true. Nobody died. He is obviously confusing the explosion with the 1960 explosion of a Soviet ballistic missile that killed well over 100 people.

All of these things are totally checkable. The fact that Schefter did not bother to check them indicates an extreme laziness and journalistic arrogance on his part. The lack of footnotes, bibliography, or other sources indicates that we simply have to take Schefter's word for all this stuff. That is hard to do considering all the obvious mistakes.

If we cannot trust him on the things that we can check, how are we to trust him about the things that we cannot check? He has all kinds of rude astronaut stories which apparently came from the Houston NASA public affairs officer, Paul Haney (although Schefter does not make clear what are first-hand accounts and what are hearsay). As I already noted, many of these do not seem believable. Others are deeply problematic.

A good example is Schefter's account of an incident following the death of astronaut Ted Freeman in 1964. Schefter was a young reporter who heard about the crash of Freeman's plane and was told by his editor to meet chief astronaut Deke Slayton at the home of Freeman's wife. He went over there and saw what he thought was Slayton's Corvette parked in the driveway. He went to the door and knocked. Freeman's wife answered and Schefter stammered out that he had heard about the accident. An angry neighbor then told Schefter to get lost.

Schefter claims that it turns out that the Corvette actually belonged to the astronauts' doctor and that Deke Slayton was not there because he had stopped at a local bar first before facing the widow. The whole story smells. For one thing, the astronauts' doctor did not own a Corvette. And Schefter's claim that Slayton went to have a beer before meeting the widow of one of his men, whether true or not (and how are we to know?), seems like a slap at Slayton.

In Schefter's favor, it seems likely that Freeman's widow already knew that something was wrong when the doctor and neighbor showed up at her door. It is unlikely that Schefter is the one who blurted out the fact that her husband was dead. But the very fact that a reporter showed up to see the widow only an hour after the death of her husband is disgusting. Why should we have any sympathy for this vulture?

The subtitle of this book also says that it is the "complete" account of the race to the moon. It isn't by a long shot. There is very little information on the Soviet side of that race. The Russians barely exist in his narrative. Is the subtitle merely another factual error or an "embellishment?"

This is a pathetic attempt at a gossipy memoir by a guy who has trouble getting his facts right. Avoid it.

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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Goes coldly where many have been before, March 12, 2000
By 
Vaughn Davis (Auckland New Zealand) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Race (Hardcover)
As a once-over lightly guide to the Mercury / Gemini / Apollo programme and its Russian counterparts, this isn't a bad book. But there are better ones available. Chaiken's "A Man on the Moon" is more interesting. Heppenheimer's "Countdown" seems more thorough. And James Harford's "Korolev" covers the Soviet effort in far greater depth.

Finding a way to make "The Race" stand out from the competition in an increasingly crowded publishing niche must have been tough. As a journalist in the thick of it as it happened, Schefter chose the "uncensored" route. "Uncensored", of course, is a meaningless adjective in this respect. As far as I know, there is no Censor of Books About Space. In its tabloid sense, however, a tag of uncensored makes us expect scandal and revelation. Sure enough, Schefter offers a little of both. But it's largely irrelevant. We knew 6/7ths of the Mercury astronauts were less than faithful - that is, we did if we read Wolfe's "Right Stuff" or ever personally knew a military pilot. And to read about some astronaut or other leaving his (to be famous) footprints on the roof lining of someone's car really adds very little to the narrative.

If Schefter was looking for an angle, why not his own? I would love to know what it was really like to be involved in reporting the space programme in the 1960s. Did he get caught up in the excitement of it all? Did he cry when Apollo 1 burned? The book sledom ventures into first person, which is a shame, because when it does it becomes novel and interesting. A little more humanity, a little more involvement, and this could have gone from being an OK book to one worth keeping.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Good overview of the space race, but nothing "uncensored", October 4, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Race (Hardcover)
This book was a disappointment, and very misleading. I have read many books on the space race and program, notably, "The Right Stuff", "Countdown", the outstanding "A Man on the Moon", "Lost Moon", etc. When buying this, I thought that I would be getting an insider's view of the U.S Manned Space Program and the Space Race in general. What it is instead, is a re-hash of the story that any reader with a casual interest in space history would already know. The Germans invent the V-2, there are "our Germans and their Germans" (See the move the Right Stuff, 1983 for that phraseology), the Russians initially take the lead in space, we go through Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo, finally landing on the moon. There is no insider view here. The author doesn't even tell the story in the first person. Aside from some amusing anecdotes about the astronauts sexual prowess (which has all been told before)and Ham and Sam, there is nothing even remotely new or uncensored in this book. It is a good primer for the reader interested in the history of the space program, but the publisher and author ought to excuse themselves for the misleading title
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