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Moondust: In Search of the Men Who Fell to Earth

By: Andrew Smith
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 0747563691
ISBN-13: 9780747563693
Released: 06 Jan 2006
RRP: £8.99
Average Rating:

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Customer Reviews

Too much subjective speculation and not enough about the astronauts! - By: Archy, 01 Jul 2008
This book tells more about Andrew Smith's quest to meet the nine men remaining from the twelve who walked on the Moon than it does about the men themselves. It is fascinating, much of the time. It's frustrating, too, when Smith waxes lyrical about his own memories, clearly forgetting that it's not his memories we want to hear about.

When he gets down to business & talks to Ed Mitchell, who has subsequently set up an organisation to unify science & religion, or `Buzz' Aldrin, who hit the depths of despair after his return, & found his way out of the mire again, or even why he's trying to get Neil Armstrong to describe his feelings at being the first man on the Moon, the book's compelling.

It's also the story of Apollo, & the ex-Nazi, Wernher von Braun, who was instrumentalin its success. Smith details the many contradictions & conundrums of Apollo, setting it against the background of the 1960s counterculture - the 60s ended, he says,in December 1972, when the last man left the Moon.

It's a book filled with memorable encounters & observations, but at the end just two stuckin my mind. The first was from Bill Anders, who was aboard Apollo 8, & so never set foot on the Moon at all. Anders points out that the whole point, the only point, of putting a man on the Moon, was to beat the Russians, "to demonstrate American technological pre-eminence." NASA, however, was a civilian organisation, so "they started pushing exploration as the motive - & soon... began believing their own PR. When Neil Armstrong & `Buzz' Aldrin planted the American flag on the Moon, the programme was over & NASA didn't realise it."

The other, more chilling comment, came from John Young, who was on Apollo 16, & who comes over as a curious, eccentric, genius. "The chance of a civilisation-ending event occurringin the next hundred years is 1in 455. Very high risk," he warns. "You're ten times more likely to get killedin a civilisation-ending event than you are of getting killed on a commercial airline flight." Console yourself with that next time you take off for sunnier climes!

Overall, a patchy book, often fascinating, but equally often frustrating, & certainly not the final word on these astronauts.
Doesn't every product appeal to a different market? - By: Mr. M. B. Powell, 05 Feb 2008
This book appealed to me straight away, dealing with a subject that I have long been fascinated in- Man landing on the moon- but that I have not yet had the inclination to wonder about any further than the fact that this amazing event happened 5 years before I was born (my wife would debate this latter point, but anyway. . .)

Therefore I would have to say that, with the added concept of interviewing the last remaining humans to have walked upon another celestial body (literally a dying breed), I enjoyed this book like no other I have readin a long time.

The writers style is relaxed, he injects just enough technical detail into his writing to make you want to find out more & I think it was great to have his own experiences linked to the unfolding story of Mankinds greatest achievement.

Overall, a triumph. The wife even read it after me. . .
Houston, we have a problem. - By: David Swallow, 14 Jan 2008
Despite a stellar launch describing the agonising suspense of the first moon landing, Moondust soon plummets disappointingly back to earth. Awkwardly caught between biography & travelogue & between accurate description & personal reflection, Andrew Smith's first book suffers from the same lack of direction that has evidently plagued the space programmein recent decades.

Putting aside the occasionally sloppy writing style, tricky phrasings & an irritating "I would later discover..." narrative device, Moondust has the feel of a distended "Where are they now?" magazine article, which may be an inevitable consequence of Smith's journalistic background. Sadly, many of the interesting observations, reflections & revelationsin this account are second-hand - borrowed honestly from third-party sources, the masses of existing literature on this well-trodden subject, & rarely from the nine surviving moonwalkers themselves.

Nevertheless, the informality of this book may appeal to those who cannot stomach a more factual analysis of the Apollo programme - Smith's hazy recollection of his childhood & an ongoing commentary on the political situation of Americain the late 1960's certainly sets the scene for mankind's `giant leap' into the unknown. As this is forced to prop up an increasingly skimpy collection of anecdotes from each astronaut however - not to mention a disappointing no-show from the elusive Neil Armstrong - one cannot help wondering whether other accounts of the moon landings (many of which Smith teasingly references) would provide a more fulfilling exposition of this fascinating subject.
Not really about the moon missions! - By: Eryndil, 27 Dec 2007
As a fan of early manned space travel, I was very interested when I first saw this book but, after looking through it quickly, decided not to buy it. However, I was then given it as a gift & my original opinion has been reinforced now that I have read it fully.

This book is not so much about the moon missions as it is about the author's childhood memories of the space race, his thoughts about the subject & his quest to track down all the surviving moonwalkers. If that is what you are interested in, you will probably enjoy this book. It does have some good parts & is funny at times.

If you want to find out more about the Apollo project, space travel or the astronauts themselves, this is not the book for you. I would recommend Chaikin's 'A Man on the Moon', which is the definitive work on this subject.
Fantastic read !!! - By: Mark Mcclelland, 23 Dec 2007
This book takes a more personal view of the Apollo program than the more factual Moon Shot, by looking at it from the perspective of the astronauts. There are some interesting facts & the authors observations evoke the era of the late 60's. But what resonated for me, was that it really put into context the whole endeavour & tried to understand what it must be like to be one of only a dozen menin the entire creation to have walked on another word.

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