[net.space] Book on space

wmartin@brl-tgr.ARPA (Will Martin ) (08/20/85)

Short review of ...THE HEAVENS AND THE EARTH, A Political History of the
Space Age, by Walter A McDougall (1985, Basic Books, Inc., 461 pp plus
appendix and notes). (The preceeding "..." is part of the title.)

This book is a rather detailed history of the American & Soviet space
efforts from WWII to the early 60's, with a brief survey of pre-WWII
experiments. I found the sections on the Soviet program to be the most
interesting; the parts on the earlier American efforts (just after WWII
and under Eisenhower) were also rather intriguing. Unfortunately, the
wealth of detail and documents available for the later American portion
(under LBJ and Kennedy) leads to such elaborate and in-depth discussion
that it became overly concerned with minutiae and rather boring. I
realize that such info is necessary for a "definitive" work on a
subject, but I was reading this in bed in the evenings over the past
days, and found myself consistently falling asleep and eventually just
skimmed the later part. Nonetheless, I do recommend the first portion
and having worthwhile information and interesting discussion.

Regards,
Will Martin

UUCP/USENET: seismo!brl-bmd!wmartin   or   ARPA/MILNET: wmartin@almsa-1.ARPA

@S1-A.ARPA,@MIT-MC.ARPA:wmartin@BRL.ARPA (08/20/85)

From: Will Martin <wmartin@brl.arpa>

Note: The following was posted to USENET's net.space newsgroup; however,
since I have noticed that recently it seems that the gateway between the
Space Digest and USENET's net.space and net.columbia is broken in one
direction (ARPA-originated postings appear on USENET but
USENET-originated material does not appear in the Digest), I am sending
this copy directly to SPACE. If you see a duplicate because the gateway
has gotten fixed in the meantime, my apologies.

Short review of ...THE HEAVENS AND THE EARTH, A Political History of the
Space Age, by Walter A McDougall (1985, Basic Books, Inc., 461 pp plus
appendix and notes). (The preceeding "..." is part of the title.)

This book is a rather detailed history of the American & Soviet space
efforts from WWII to the early 60's, with a brief survey of pre-WWII
experiments. I found the sections on the Soviet program to be the most
interesting; the parts on the earlier American efforts (just after WWII
and under Eisenhower) were also rather intriguing. Unfortunately, the
wealth of detail and documents available for the later American portion
(under LBJ and Kennedy) leads to such elaborate and in-depth discussion
that it became overly concerned with minutiae and rather boring. I
realize that such info is necessary for a "definitive" work on a
subject, but I was reading this in bed in the evenings over the past
days, and found myself consistently falling asleep and eventually just
skimmed the later part. Nonetheless, I do recommend the first portion
and having worthwhile information and interesting discussion.

Regards,
Will Martin

UUCP/USENET: seismo!brl-bmd!wmartin   or   ARPA/MILNET: wmartin@almsa-1.ARPA