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Around the World in 84 Days: The Authorized Biography of Skylab Astronaut Jerry Carr (Apogee Books Space Series)
 
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Around the World in 84 Days: The Authorized Biography of Skylab Astronaut Jerry Carr (Apogee Books Space Series) (Paperback)

~ David J. Shayler (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Homesteading Space: The Skylab Story (Outward Odyssey: A People's History of S) by David Hitt

Around the World in 84 Days: The Authorized Biography of Skylab Astronaut Jerry Carr (Apogee Books Space Series) + Homesteading Space: The Skylab Story (Outward Odyssey: A People's History of S)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This book is a good amalgam of the technical and the human - of great interest to any space historian." -- Spaceflight April 2009


Product Description

For 84 days—from November 16, 1973, to February 8, 1974—mission commander Jerry Carr orbited the Earth on board the American space station Skylab 4, setting a new record for time in space. Had the Apollo 19 mission not been cancelled, Carr could have been the 16th man to walk on the Moon. Covering his record-setting time in space as well as his training in the U.S. Marine Corps, his career with NASA, and his retirement years, this biography brings the story of Gerald P. Carr to life.  Includes DVD.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Collector's Guide Publishing, Inc.; Pap/DVD edition (January 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 189495940X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1894959407
  • Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 6.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #638,244 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #61 in  Books > Biographies & Memoirs > Professionals & Academics > Astronauts

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Around the World in 84 Days: Very well Researched, but the Voice of the Astronaut is the Gold, March 18, 2009
By Peter Thorpe (Asheville, NC) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I love well documented NASA historical stuff. The Apollo missions have had vast documentation, but there is much less for Skylab, which followed the lunar landings. Now we have a really great book about Skylab. David Shayler, a British space historian, has done a wonderful job of telling the story of Jerry Carr, commander of Skylab IV, the final mission in 1973-74 to the orbital outpost which lasted 84 days and set all sorts of records. Shayler provides decades of research in an easily readable fashion.

However, it is Jerry Carr's comments, presented as current reminisces but also as actual diary entries from the mission, that really makes this a fantastic read. Carr talks about his childhood, his Marine flight training, joining NASA, and his frustration at losing the chance at Apollo 19 (Apollo 17 was the last flight to the Moon, the planned missions 18 and 19 were canceled). But he got the last Skylab mission, and for the entire mission, he kept a diary. Shayler gives us the entries while explaining the context.

Jerry Carr is not just a 'fly boy', being reported about, but a person who we can relate to. His fascinations and frustrations with commanding a long endurance mission to the Skylab space station is balanced by his own self inspection, his connections to his family, who were supporting him from the ground, and his love of just watching planet Earth out of the windows. Al Bean, Commander of Skylab III, did not want to gaze for hours out the window. But Jerry could not get enough, and while doing so he thought about the fate of his planet and the dynamics of his family at home, and his piers at work (above and below). On top of that, there is a DVD included with the book that contains footage of all the Skylab missions, as well as rare footage of Jerry and fellow astronauts training for both lunar and Skylab Apollo missions.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fills a Gap in Manned Spaceflight History, February 7, 2009
This is a difficult book to review. Having read every astronaut biography, I was unsure what to expect, particularly because a "sameness" has crept into so many of these bios: smalltown boy unintentionally develops a love for flying, joins the military in the Cold War years, is captivated by the early Space Race and ends up joining NASA, before struggling to master "astro-politics".

Initially, this book follows a familiar (if increasingly tiresome) theme about childhood and military service before NASA. The difference is the detail with which Carr records some parts of his story. He gives a good account of what it was like moving through the military in the 1950s/1960s.

Likewise the account of the NASA years follows a familiar theme; the difference here being that it is told by one of the astronauts who 'lost the Moon' because of cuts to the later Apollo lunar flights. This is a truly interesting part of the book, and it is the first time this has been covered in an astro-biography. It is, however, quite annoying to see a number of photos of Irwin on the Moon on Apollo 15 with the caption "this might have been Carr, if Apollo 19 had flown" (because 19 was destined for Hadley/Appenine before sites were re-allocated after the cuts).

Carr gives a good perspective on the difference/separation between the Apollo and Skylab programs in the 1969/70 period when, after Apollo 19 was cancelled and he was assigned to Skylab, he realised how little he knew - or had reason to know - about Skylab. Frankly, he had no need to because up until then he was, in his words, a "lunar landing man" focused solely on the lunar program, so to him Skylab was invisible and (although it is not said in so many words) considered less important.

So this book charts Carr's (and his family's) catharsis as he deals with the loss of a Moon mission, and gaining a program and mission that formerly had been furthest from his mind, but for which he becomes intensely proud.

The Skylab chapters are, naturally, the most interesting. Much of the material is drawn from an on-orbit diary maintained during Skylab 4 (reproduced verbatim), which gives an interesting perspective on life onboard Skylab. There have been books covering this sort of material from Mir/ISS (Linenger's "Off the Planet", Foale's (father's) "Waystation to the Stars", and even Burroughs' "Dragonfly"), but not one from Skylab. Of course, I have exorcised from consideration the appallingly bad "Rocketman" (see my review, "Very, Very Disappointing"), which simply does not do justice to Conrad's stint on Skylab 2.

There are interesting contributions from Carr's family members, which give a good insight into life on the homefront, especially for an astronaut on a long-duration mission.

The pity, in one sense, is that Carr's book has been released more or less at the same time as the Outward Odyssey series' "Homesteading Space", with which it will inevitably be compared. So "84 Days" will not have a long window in which to be considered on its own merits before avid readers "move on" not only to the next credible book about the US space program, but one dealing with exactly the same topic.

Even so, Carr's book is an interesting, although not always fascinating, read. It doesn't have the "edge of your seats" captivation of "Carrying the Fire" (Collins) or "All-American Boys" (Cunningham) or "Riding Rockets" (Mullane), but it holds its own, and gives a new(ish) slant on a poorly covered era in the US space program. Parts of it a bit turgid, but other parts are very well done.

It is a worthy read, and it is a worthy addition to the collection of anyone, like me, who has an interest in this subject.

Three stars, although I really, really, really wanted to give it four. (Amazon, can I give it three and a half?)
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5.0 out of 5 stars The SPACE PROGRAM is GREAT!, April 4, 2009
By Gerard Doran "interested in real life" (Boston - home of the greatest - the Patriots!!!!!) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a tremendous book. Not a minute of it was boring - The first three month American space flight in '73-'74 was a tremendous thing, (Skylab).
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