Star bound A beginner's guide to the American space program, from Goddard's rockets to Goldilocks planets and everything in between

Emily Carney

Book - 2025

"Star Bound is a book for anyone who wants to learn about the American space program but isn't sure where to start. First and foremost, it's a history-short, sweet, and straightforward. From rocketry pioneer Robert Goddard's primitive flight tests in 1926 through the creation of NASA, from our first steps on the moon to construction of the International Space Station and planning a trip to Mars, readers will meet the people and projects that have put the United States at the forefront of space exploration. Along the way, they'll learn: How the United States beat the Soviets to the moon Why astronauts float in space (Hint: It's not for lack of gravity!) How fast rockets have to go to stay in orbit around Earth H...ow we can "look back in time" through a space telescope With technology evolving and humanity's understanding of the universe expanding, we are entering an exciting period of space exploration. Authored by two veteran space writers with unique insights into the topic, Star Bound offers up the story of Americans in space with a focus on the cultural and societal contexts of the country's most important missions rather than engineering and technical minutiae. Vibrant, positive, and humorous, Star Bound is packed with facts and stories for novice space fans. And sprinkled in with the history are lists of the greatest space songs, books, movies, and more-all designed to make space exploration accessible to even the casual reader"--

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
  • First principles
  • The wizard of Worcester
  • Rocketry and death
  • The SS major and the Suicide Squad : the all-time greatest space exploration playlist
  • A starting gun called Sputnik
  • The man who fell to Earth
  • Light this candle! The Mercury Program : eleven boffo space books to launch at your brain
  • Gemini's forgotten flights
  • The rise and fall of the American Astronaut : the best space stuff you can watch
  • Apollo and the first man on the Moon
  • Skylab and the renaissance of American science : NASA's coolest astronauts
  • Send more Chuck Berry : probes, rovers, and the golden record
  • The butterfly and the bullet : NASA's greatest missions
  • Sleeping with the Russians
  • False starts, missteps, and the promise of Artemis America's biggest space failures
  • The new space race
  • The commercialization of space eleven everyday benefits of the American space program
  • Curse you, Gene Roddenberry! The eleven best (and worst) rumors, riddles, and conspiracy theories about the American space program
  • Looking outward eleven fearless space predictions
  • The ultimate question : is it worth it?
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Carney, a former U.S. Navy nuclear technician, joins forces with novelist McCandless (Wonders All Around) to deliver an outstanding overview of American space exploration, starting with physicist Robert Goddard's 1926 launch of the first liquid-propelled rocket. German engineer Wernher von Braun expanded on Goddard's innovations by creating the V-2 missile for the Nazis, demonstrating a technical prowess that motivated the U.S. to covertly recruit him for their burgeoning space program after WWII. The authors offer a fleet-footed account of how von Braun and others helped America win the space race, covering NASA's faltering early days playing catch-up to the Soviets after Sputnik and the agencywide soul-searching after the Apollo 1 crew burned alive on the launchpad. Elsewhere, Carney and McCandless cover the construction of the International Space Station and the rise of SpaceX, Blue Origin, and other private spaceflight companies. The trivia fascinates (NASA got the idea to count down to zero before launches from the 1929 sci-fi film Woman in the Moon), and the authors ground their narrative in colorful character portraits, describing, for instance, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin as "equal parts ice and intellect" and "the space community's problem child," respectively. This soars. Photos. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved