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Hypersonic: The Story of the North American X-15 Hardcover – January 1, 2003
- Print length276 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSpecialty Pr Pub & Wholesalers
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 2003
- Dimensions10.5 x 0.75 x 10.25 inches
- ISBN-10158007068X
- ISBN-13978-1580070683
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Review
"This book is simply the definitive work on one of North American Aviation's greatest achievements, the hypersonic X-15..." -- Wings (June 2003, Vol. 33, No. 3)
"This is hands down the absolute best reference on the X-15 program, bar none ... $39.95 is an unbelievable bargain." -- Internet Modeler
"To call Hypersonic a "book" is to do it injustice; it's really an encyclopedia, and a comprehensive one ..." -- Air & Space Smithsonian (July 2003)
Product details
- Publisher : Specialty Pr Pub & Wholesalers; First Edition, First Printing (January 1, 2003)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 276 pages
- ISBN-10 : 158007068X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1580070683
- Item Weight : 3.3 pounds
- Dimensions : 10.5 x 0.75 x 10.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,096,473 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #688 in Aviation History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Actually, one book did admirably cover the engineering points and human character of the X-15 program, and that was "90 Seconds to Space - the Story of the X-15" by Jules Bergman. It was printed many, many years ago (first printing in 1960), and in the following years I couldn't find any other books that met that standard of engineering and journalistic coverage. Jules Bergman was ABC's science editor for 25 years, and as a kid growing up during the Gemini and Apollo programs, I couldn't wait to hear his thorough and honest reporting on the subject. He helped make our space program one of the best liked federal programs in the world, and that's saying a lot.
"Hypersonic" by Dennis Jenkins picks up all of the remaining and vital pieces of X-15 program information, and the author crafts it all together into one fine read. He does a splendid job of explaining the strong-willed characters who had the genius and determination to even suggest such a program, the engineering challenges the entire team of engineers, pilots and support personnel faced, and their almost unbelievably continuous series of successes and triumphs.
Yes, this is recommended reading!
I find myself constantly re-reading sections; the audacity (and talent!) of the people involved is breathtaking; the authors capture that. If, for example, you're fascinated with the development of the SR-71, and reading about the ingenuity exhibited by those folks in problem solving, this is a book for you.
Never reckless, but never timid, these folks pushed through challenges that would scare the current NASA mob witless. In a weird way, the Soviet challenge may have set back manned space flight decades; we junked far more promising projects to win a race we were never going to loose anyway - the logical follow-ons to the X-15 were ignored in favor of quick-fix solutions. But no whining here! The X-15 stands on it's own merits as a thunderous success. Read this book!
Well, if this is all so great, why did I rate it 'only' 4-stars? Most readers who take the time to write a review either do it because they really liked that particular book (in which case 5-star ratings are the norm), or they found something particular they disliked (in which case 3-star or less ratings are the norm). Personally, 5-stars should be reserved to books in which I can only find very little or nothing to crtitize, which unfortunately is not the case with Hypersonic.
First comes the format: This book should have been printed in a different format (page size). As it is, there is so much information 'cramped' into one page, that it becomes almost a pain to really read through all of it. Additionally, the font size is so small (in order to pack the pages full), that you better have good eyesight and lots of light - not an ideal read before sleeping! The number of pages in this book does not reflect the content, it should be rather 500+ pages with 'normal' content per page.
Then, I found it very anoying for such an otherwise so well done book to find that many typing and editing errors, this is really not a good editing job.
Finally, I think the book deserved more 'cockpit' piloting stories that tell you what it felt to be mounted on top of such a powerfull rocket engine and for a few minutes be an astronaut, maybe even some more amusing annecdotes that must have happened throughout the 10+ years of flying. Even such an interesting subject as the X-15 can become a rather dry and technical read, and unfortunately this does happen in this book.
Overall, this is an authoritative history of the X-15 program, focused on the enginerring and technical challenges that needed to be overcomed before putiing a man on a rocket plane and fly at Mach 6.7 and 350.000 feet - recommended.
Top reviews from other countries
Hypersonic details the genesis and through to the end of the X-15 - the precursor and adjunct to the moon landings programme - and is beautifully laid out and printed. Dense, and closely spaced with facts about this most potent and lovely of human guided missiles, which was current as a wonder of the modern world when I was a lad. The writing is also balanced by its liberal use of photographs too (500!), most of which I'd never seen before. In fact so evocative of the times are the photos that I wish for the follow-up volume X-15: Photo Scrapbook ('the photos they didn't have the space to print in Hypersonic') to be made available again.
