9781665098656-1665098651-Across the Airless Wilds Lib/E: The Lunar Rover and the Triumph of the Final Moon Landings

Across the Airless Wilds Lib/E: The Lunar Rover and the Triumph of the Final Moon Landings

ISBN-13: 9781665098656
ISBN-10: 1665098651
Edition: Unabridged
Author: Earl Swift
Publication date: 2021
Publisher: HarperCollins
Format: Audio CD 11 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781665098656
ISBN-10: 1665098651
Edition: Unabridged
Author: Earl Swift
Publication date: 2021
Publisher: HarperCollins
Format: Audio CD 11 pages

Summary

Across the Airless Wilds Lib/E: The Lunar Rover and the Triumph of the Final Moon Landings (ISBN-13: 9781665098656 and ISBN-10: 1665098651), written by authors Earl Swift, was published by HarperCollins in 2021. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other United States History (Aerospace, Engineering, Aeronautics & Astronautics, Astronomy & Space Science, Americas History) books. You can easily purchase or rent Across the Airless Wilds Lib/E: The Lunar Rover and the Triumph of the Final Moon Landings (Audio CD) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used United States History books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.33.

Description

"Earl Swift lays out this great unsung saga with verve and magisterial sweep." --Hampton Sides

In this "brilliantly observed" (Newsweek) rediscovery of the final Apollo moon landings, the acclaimed author of Chesapeake Requiem reveals that these extraordinary yet overshadowed missions--distinguished by the use of the revolutionary lunar roving vehicle--deserve to be celebrated as the pinnacle of human adventure and exploration.

8:36 P.M. EST, December 12, 1972: Apollo 17 astronauts Gene Cernan and Jack Schmitt braked to a stop alongside Nansen Crater, keenly aware that they were far, far from home. They had flown nearly a quarter-million miles to the man in the moon's left eye, landed at its edge, and then driven five miles in to this desolate, boulder-strewn landscape. As they gathered samples, they strode at the outermost edge of mankind's travels. This place, this moment, marked the extreme of exploration for a species born to wander. 

A few feet away sat the machine that made the achievement possible: an electric go-cart that folded like a business letter, weighed less than eighty pounds in the moon's reduced gravity, and muscled its way up mountains, around craters, and over undulating plains on America's last three ventures to the lunar surface. 

In the decades since, the exploits of the astronauts on those final expeditions have dimmed in the shadow cast by the first moon landing. But Apollo 11 was but a prelude to what came later: while Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin trod a sliver of flat lunar desert smaller than a football field, Apollos 15, 16, and 17 each commanded a mountainous area the size of Manhattan. All told, their crews traveled fifty-six miles, and brought deep science and a far more swashbuckling style of exploration to the moon. And they triumphed for one very American reason: they drove.

In this fast-moving history of the rover and the adventures it ignited, Earl Swift puts the reader alongside the men who dreamed of driving on the moon and designed and built the vehicle, troubleshot its flaws, and drove it on the moon's surface. Finally shining a deserved spotlight on these overlooked characters and the missions they created, Across the Airless Wilds is a celebration of human genius, perseverance, and daring.

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