[FPSPACE] The Definitive Soviet space history book

Will Marchant kc6rol@amsat.org
Thu, 31 Aug 2000 09:14:19 -0400


I called the NASA Publications Office and while they have the book they
can't sell it yet because the GPO has not assigned a price!  So, Nicole
will let me know when there is a price.  And I'll let you all know! 
Then you can order it!  I did a search on the GPO site and didn't find
the book...
	Will

Dwayne Allen Day wrote:
> 
> Fellow FP Spacer and all-around-nice guy Asif Siddiqi has a new book out
> on the history of the Soviet space program and it is one damn impressive
> piece of work.
> 
> First, I have to mention the dimensions.  This thing is huge.  It is
> easily two inches thick (4 meters for those members of the audience using
> the metric system) and it probably weighs three pounds (7.8 hectares for
> our metric friends).  Seriously, everyone should get a copy simply to use
> for personal defense.  Hold it up in front of you and you can deflect a
> bullet aimed at your heart.  Throw it with sufficient velocity and you can
> crush a man's skull.
> 
> Okay, okay I know...
> 
> The book is titled Challenge to Apollo and it covers the history of the
> Soviet space program from 1945 until 1974.  The book is 1011 pages long.
> 
> (Yes, that is right.  Let me repeat it:  ONE THOUSAND AND ELEVEN PAGES.)
> 
> I admit to not having even started to read it.  However, everyone who has
> read it who I have talked to (about half a dozen people) has said it is
> outstanding.  Not just okay.  Not just good.  But outstanding.
> It covers everything, from Korolev's time in the prison camp to the lunar
> program to the Salyut space stations.  This is now the DEFINITIVE
> English-language space history book.  As we say in Washington, our man
> Asif now has some pretty impressive creds...
> 
> It is a NASA SP publication.  Hard cover with quite a few illustrations,
> line drawings, and many many tables and appendices and all that kind of
> stuff.
> 
> So, if you are at all interested in the Soviet space program (and if you
> aren't, what the heck are you doing in FPSpace?!), then you should
> immediately get this book, quit your job, and spend the next three months
> of your life reading it.
> 
> Go buy Challenge to Apollo.  You hear me?  Get it right now.
> 
> DDAY
> 
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-- 
Will Marchant
marchant@ssl.berkeley.edu       http://chips.ssl.berkeley.edu/
kc6rol@amsat.org                http://www.citizen.infi.net/~wmarchan/