Description
A people's history of the global space race in the 1960s, beginning with cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin and astronaut Alan Shepard and ending with the close of the Mercury and Voskhod programs in 1965.
About the Author
Francis French is the director of education at the San Diego Air and Space Museum and the coauthor with Colin Burgess of In the Shadow of the Moon: A Challenging Journey to Tranquility, 1965-1969 (Nebraska 2007). Colin Burgess is a former flight service director with Qantas Airlines and the author of many books on spaceflight, including Fallen Astronauts: Heroes Who Died Reaching for the Moon, available in a Bison Books edition. A NASA public affairs officer from 1958 to 1969, Paul Haney was known widely as NASA's "voice of mission control."
Reviews
"[Into That Silent Sea] dispenses with distracting technical jargon and nationalistic jingoism to deliver ten superbly composed, thoughtfully balanced chapters about the astronauts and cosmonauts who flew Mercury and Vostok/Voskhod missions. . . . Avid readers will revel in the authors' masterful compilation of these straight-forward, detailed mini-biographies."-Air Power History
"Eminently readable, well-crafted. . . . The merits of this popular history rest in the elegant narrative and the authors' thoughtful awareness of the space explorer genre."-Air & Space Smithsonian
"French and Burgess's history will engage the space-program audience."-Booklist
"A well-written account about the Americans and Russians who were the first to fly into space. . . . [The book] offers some excellent profiles of these individuals that are accessible to both newcomers to space history and well-read enthusiasts alike."-Space Review
"For space fans, this is a good read."-Choice
"Into That Silent Sea is an excellent reminder of just what Gagarin and other trailblazers did and how they became international celebrities in their own right. We seem to have forgotten just how new the frontier of space was. . . . Many people today seem to view space programs as an extravagance or with disinterest. For those who remain interested in those programs and have read the prior histories and memoirs, it never hurts to be reminded of just how pioneering the first steps were."-Tim Gebhart, Blogcritics.org, Boston.com
"I enjoyed every page of this nearly 400-page tome. I was disappointed to finish it simply because I wanted to read more. . . . If you're new to this field of reading I'd highly recommend starting with this book. The background on the spacefarers is very interesting."-Today in Space History Blog
"The straightforward yet engrossing writing style of this history will interest readers from the junior-high level to adults. . . . What is especially compelling about this race into space story is the humanistic narrative, describing the individual cosmonauts and astronauts. . . . For younger readers, the description emphasizes the characteristics of determination, scholarship, loyalty, comraderie, dedication, and fitness-traits that are essential for astronaut applicants."-Rita Hoots, Journal of College Science Teaching
"Through dozens of interviews and access to Russian and American official documents and family records, the authors bring to life the experiences that shaped the lives of the first astronauts and cosmonauts and forever changed their worlds and ours."-Space Flight
"Into That Silent Sea explores the early Space Age from a very human-centric perspective."-Todd A. Mooring, Oral History Review
Book Information
ISBN 9780803226395
Author Francis French
Format Paperback
Page Count 440
Imprint Bison Books
Publisher University of Nebraska Press
Weight(grams) 590g