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Rocket Ship Galileo Mass Market Paperback – December 28, 2004
- Length
211
Pages
- Language
EN
English
- PublisherAce
- Publication date
2004
December 28
- Grade level12 - 6
- Reading age18 years and up
- Dimensions
5.3 x 0.6 x 7.7
inches
- ISBN-10044101237X
- ISBN-13978-0441012374
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Product details
- Publisher : Ace; 58995th edition (December 28, 2004)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 211 pages
- ISBN-10 : 044101237X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0441012374
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Grade level : 12 - 6
- Item Weight : 4.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.26 x 0.62 x 7.66 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,657,356 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #37,198 in Science Fiction Adventures
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Robert Heinlein was an American novelist and the grand master of science fiction in the twentieth century. Often called 'the dean of science fiction writers', he is one of the most popular, influential and controversial authors of 'hard science fiction'.
Over the course of his long career he won numerous awards and wrote 32 novels, 59 short stories and 16 collections, many of which have cemented their place in history as science fiction classics, including STARSHIP TROOPERS, THE MOON IS A HARSH MISTRESS and the beloved STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND.
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Top reviews from the United States
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Rocket Ship Galileo was the first of Heinlein's juveniles, and it was a tour de force which established him in the market and led to a series which would extend to twelve volumes. (Heinlein scholars differ on which of his novels are classified as juveniles. Some include Starship Troopers as a juvenile, but despite its having been originally written as one and rejected by his publisher, Heinlein did not classify it thus.)
The plot could not be more engaging to a young person at the dawn of the atomic and space age. Three high school seniors, self-taught in the difficult art of rocketry (often, as was the case for their seniors in the era, by trial and [noisy and dangerous] error), are recruited by an uncle of one of them, veteran of the wartime atomic project, who wants to go to the Moon. He's invented a novel type of nuclear engine which allows a single-stage ship to make the round trip, and having despaired of getting sclerotic government or industry involved, decides to do it himself using cast-off parts and the talent and boundless energy of young people willing to learn by doing.
Working in their remote desert location, they become aware that forces unknown are taking an untoward interest in their work and seem to want to bring it to a halt, going as far as sabotage and lawfare. Finally, it's off to the Moon, where they discover the dark secret on the far side: space Nazis!
The remarkable thing about this novel is how well it holds up, more than seventy years after publication. While Heinlein was writing for a young audience, he never condescended to them. The science and engineering were as accurate as known at the time, and Heinlein manages to instill in his audience a basic knowledge of rocket propulsion, orbital mechanics, and automated guidance systems as the yarn progresses. Other than three characters being young people, there is nothing about this story which makes it “juvenile” fiction: there is a hard edge of adult morality and the value of courage which forms the young characters as they live the adventure.
1) WW2 and Nazi Germany were recent memory
2) modern computers hadnt even been imagined yet
3) the Apollo mission hadnt even been imagined by future president JFK
...it's a fun story. Heinlein spends a great deal of time and words explaining how the nuclear rocket works, and makes a lot of assumptions about space travel that we now know aren't true. But it's STILL a good story.
I bought the book for nostalgia. It was well worth the price.
Top reviews from other countries
It's quite easy to look at this book and criticise the content, the tone and mood of the story, or the science, but what you have to bear in mind is that this book was first published in 1947, almost seventy years ago and a full decade before Russia managed to successfully put the first man-made object into orbit. Despite this, Heinlein managed to get a lot of the science right, and even managed to include some didactic science and technology for the more inquisitive reader to absorb.
The story itself may seem trite and overly optimistic to the modern reader; a trio of teenage boys, with the help of a slightly eccentric uncle, equip their own atomic rocketship and make what they think is the first successful trip to the moon. There they find evidence of an extinct lunar civilisation as well as a secret base full of Nazis intent on destroying all the cities of the world. Suffice to say the boys thwart the plans of the Nazis and return to earth safe and sound by the end of the book.
To modern sensibilities it's easy to see how that plotline can seem a little naive and simplistic, but this is one of the earlier examples of sci-fi space adventure, written only a few short years after the end of the Second World War during a period when hope for the future and fear of the past mixed in equal portions.
What this book does show is Heinlein's hope (or perhaps belief) that the younger generation of his time held the potential to lead America, and perhaps the world, into a brighter, more enlightened future. It shows an optimistic view of the post-war years, in which the quest to reach beyond this planet would play an important role. It would be twenty-two years more before the human race finally set foot on the moon but even in the mid-forties Heinlein was envisaging such a thing happening and telling us, "this is the next big adventure."
I would recommend this book (along with a great many more by Heinlein, as well as Arthur C. Clarke, Isaac Asimov, and all the other great writers of the sci-fi Golden Age) to any sci-fi fan who wants to see where modern science fiction has come from. I would also recommend it to anyone who thinks that modern sci-fi is perhaps a little too dark and dystopian and who wants something a little more optimistic and fun.





