For the Starchild in all of us…
Ken Murphy / 6:19 pm June 19th, 2006
Published in 2006 by Apogee Books, it weighs in at 303 pages plus CD-ROM with all images and slideshow feature featuring music by Hawkwind. A few minor factual errors, but nothing significant given the sheer volume of material.
Full Disclosure: This reviewer also helped to write the book. I was asked to help Tom Matula with the Moon section. I receive no remuneration for either my contribution to the book or this review, other than an author’s copy from the editor.
Hot off the presses, this amazing book was created by engaging thousands of schoolchildren in the U.S. and Canada to submit some 18,000 questions and thousands of drawings. These were then culled for duplicates and unintelligible questions, and the remaining 1,827 questions were then farmed out to scores of people engaged in our space efforts. With 101 chapters, the questions clearly ranged across a wide variety of topics.
The book tries to sort them into three general categories: Planning to go to Space, Visiting and Living in Space, and Exploring Space. Really it should be regarded as a really well written and illustrated space almanac for kids. Everything you could possibly want to know about travelling into space is covered, from hair & nails to ultraviolet rays.
It takes a while to read through, and I have to admit I learned a couple of things from the effort. What’s intriguing is the sorts of things that kids had questions about. Ranked in order these were:
The Moon (114)
Spacecraft (97)
Health & Medical (60)
Planets (47)
Emergencies (45)
Space (44)
Communities (37)
Asteroids, Comets & Meteors (35)
Clothing (34)
Weightlessness (31)
Galaxy, Solar System & Universe (31)
That’s a pretty telling list, and says a great deal about what this next generation’s thoughts are about space. They want to go to the Moon, in space craft, while taking good care of themselves, and being cautious of emergencies as they explore the planets and asteroids and live in space in really hip clothes.
The pool of experts put together is quite humbling, eighty-three total. Buzz Aldrin is there, as is Eric Anderson (Space Adventures), Robert Bigelow (Bigelow Aerospace), Sir Richard Branson (Virgin Galactic), Sir Arthur Clarke (Dean of Space), Brad Edwards (carbon nanotubes), David Gump (t/Space), Loretta Hidalgo (Yuri’s Night), Carolyn Porco (Cassini PI), Burt Rutan (Scaled Composites), Dennis Tito (ISS tourist), Neil DeGrasse-Tyson (Hayden Planetarium NYC), and George Whitesides (Exec. Dir. - National Space Society,), as well as 15 astronauts to give some first-hand background.
The real success of this work lies in the participation of the 6,000-odd school kids from 83 U.S. and 1 Canadian school, as well as from 17 schools that submitted questions for the ‘Going to Space with Disabilities’ chapter. (Quick, can anyone name all -7- senses?)
I think I was most impressed with the chapter on Health & Medicine. USAF Col. Dr. Richard S. Williams did an outstanding job of covering the topic in a no-nonsense fashion that really answered each question. Other good sections were Dennis Tito’s “Expectations” and Robert Bigelow’s “Space Hotels”. Trygve Magelssen did a really good job with “Resources”, and the “Sports” questions were neat, and U.S. Space & Rocket Center did a great job answering them. Paintball on the Moon!
The book is lavishly illustrated with drawings done by the youngsters, one for each chapter. Some real concerns are expressed, and it’s not just a happy-feely love-fest of pictures. Edvard Munch’s “The Scream” is referenced in the drawing on the back cover. One young lady asserts that “Although we can expand and live in space it DOESN’T mean we should.” There are also 40 full-color glossy pictures in the middle. Some of the pictures display an excellent amount of care in their preparation (like the young lady’s from Nevada which opens the section on “Visiting & Living in Space”), and an awful lot of creativity. Interestingly, most of the space stations pictured were of the big rotating ring or ring/cylinder combination.
It’s very difficult for me to divorce myself from my pride of ownership (with Tom Matula) of the Moon chapter for a rating attempt. Attempting to ignore that particularly excellent chapter, I do have to look at the fact that there were a few factual errors, and some of the answers seemed to reflect more what the expert wanted to say as opposed to answering the question asked. These oh so few limitations have to be looked at in the context of what has been achieved by this project, which is a book that is probably going to be the definitive childrens space reference for a while. I highly recommend the hardbound copy that I picked up, if only for some measure of durability.
6,000 kids, 1,800 questions, 1,000 illustrations, 101 schools, 101 chapters, 83 experts, and one heck of an editor.
It gets a Full Moon rating.
Find more children’s space books in the Youth section of the Lunar Library