17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
For serious space enthusiasts only, September 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: This New Ocean : The Story of the First Space Age (Hardcover)
An exhaustive and outstanding compendium that catalogues the entire space effort over the past fifty years with emphasis on both civilian and military ventures as well as manned and unmanned ventures. I have been reading about the space program for over 20 years and I was impressed with the amount of detail that the author was able to uncover. I also very much like the way he gave equal time to the oft-ignored gemini program and the equally ignored mariner and viking missions. In contrast to other reader reviews, I found his political commentary to be relatively fair. Overall, a great read but only one for those with a deep and genuine interest in all aspects of the subject. 700 pages of dense material. "Lost Moon" it is not.
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Broad, politically-focused account of the space program, April 16, 2000
Whew! I feel as if I've spent a significant chunk of my life reading this book! It's a sweeping history of the space program that delves deeply into the background and circumstances, so much so that it's not till the halfway point of the book that it gets to Gagarin, Shepard, and the first manned space flights.
The first part is actually the strongest, covering in detail what went before (going clear back to Daedalus!), particularly the contributions of Tsiolkovsky, Goddard, Oberth, and the German V-2 team.
Even when it does get to what we think of as the space program proper, technogeeks may be disappointed because it's short on technical detail but but long on the individuals and circumstances responsible for the rockets: not what the Saturn V was but how and why it came to be.
The breadth leads to some mildly startling brevity: Apollo 11 is covered in a sometimes annoyingly inaccurate three pages: The alarms on the landing approach were not "ignored" by the controller but understood as not being critical, and there were more than six seconds of fuel left in the engines at touchdown.
But there are other books for that (Chaikin's of course being the first to come to mind). What I read here but not elsewhere in addition to the background included extensive coverage of the military space program, particularly reconaissance satellites but also the never-to-be Dyna-Soar and Manned Orbiting Laboratory programs.
Weaknesses include a jarring tendency for the author to abruptly step forward and insert his own opinions, usually in sentence fragments; a sometimes glib, too-clever tone; oblique references to incidents or people mentioned ten or fifty or hundreds of pages ago that the author expects the reader to pick up on; the occasional inaccuracy, as with Apollo 11 above or with the Ariane rocket described as French rather than European; and an appallingly bad index which, among other gaps, has no mention of Project Gemini despite fairly good coverage in the book itself.
And the final chapter, covering the present and future of the space program, seems to be the weakest. It comes across as kind of a laundry list of what's going on and what's planned: Hubble, lunar mining, Pathfinder, Cassini, John Glenn's shuttle flight, future Mars missions, Zubrin's plans, terraforming Mars, and the possibility of missions to the stars all take a brief moment on the stage before being ushered off again.
Still, it's an awesome feat to cover in one book the history of the space program in all of its manifestations: Russian, American, manned, unmanned, military, civilian. I was impressed and will likely be referring back to this book often.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
THE comprehensive history of space exploration, April 27, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: This New Ocean : The Story of the First Space Age (Hardcover)
William Burrows has compiled a complete and detailed history of the space program from the earliest thoughts and writings about the nature of space and space travel, to the present day struggles of NASA with the space station. Especially interesting is his tracing of the dynamic tension and close brotherhood between the "civilian" space program and the "military" program, although they were supposed to be separate.
As a long-time worker in the civilian space program I can attest to the accuracy of Burrow's writing about it. The only flaw in the book is its tendency to belabor the same points a bit, e.g. that the military and civilian space programs were inextricably linked. Also, the book is so replete with names that it can be a little confusing.
Nevertheless, this is a book that should be on the shelf of everyone interested in space exploration.
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