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Back to the Moon
Back to the Moon
Back to the Moon
Audiobook (abridged)4 hours

Back to the Moon

Written by Homer Hickam

Narrated by Michael R. LeGault

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

A renegade rocket man haunted by his past. A beautiful daredevil who thinks she can do it all -- until she finds herself on the adventure of her life. A death-defying mission so risky, so audacious, that no one would try it...unless the fate of the world depended on its success.
Thirty years after man's first lunar landing, retired NASA engineer Homer Hickam, Jr., offers a brilliantly imagined, endlessly entertaining return to space adventure in his spectacular first novel, Back to the Moon.
Jack Medaris doesn't "borrow" the space shuttle Columbia to be a hero or a villain. A man of science driven by the memory of the woman who once inspired him, Jack risks his life, his name, and everything he has, to sidetrack the shuttle and take it on an unscheduled detour to the moon, where the secrets of his past -- and the future of the world -- await him. But when the meticulously plotted launch goes fatally wrong, and payload specialist Penny High Eagle further complicates Jack's plan, he must confront unforeseen challenges both in space and on the ground.
Writing with the detail and intelligence that only an insider could, Hickam takes us to places few have ever seen, strapping us into the cockpit of the shuttle and hurtling us into orbit and beyond. From the crackling tension of mission control to the savage emptiness of deep space, from the massive rocket engines capable of generating millions of pounds of thrust to the tiny killing machines awaiting a bygone era's orders to unleash their high-tech fury, here are the sights and science of space as you've never seen them before. A no-holds-barred joyride of a thriller, Back to the Moon confirms that Homer Hickam is a master storyteller like no other.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 1, 1999
ISBN9780743541831
Back to the Moon
Author

Homer Hickam

Homer Hickam (also known as Homer H. Hickam, Jr.) is the bestselling and award-winning author of many books, including the #1 New York Times memoir Rocket Boys, which was adapted into the popular film October Sky. A writer since grade school, he is also a Vietnam veteran, a former coal miner, a scuba instructor, an avid amateur paleontologist, and a retired engineer. He lives in Alabama and the Virgin Islands.

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Reviews for Back to the Moon

Rating: 3.7941176617647057 out of 5 stars
4/5

34 ratings2 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The successful final test of Prometheus, a robotic moon miner developed by the Medaris Engineering Company, will allow Jack Medaris to provide Doctor Isaac Perlman with a vital component for clean energy. But a destructive attack, designed to annihilate any possibility of a successful mission leaves Jack’s company in ruins. Determined to fulfill his promise to Perlman and hoping to complete a personal quest, Jack “borrows” the space shuttle Columbia. However, a launch gone fatally wrong and an unanticipated passenger present him with unexpected challenges. Will Jack find a way to reach the moon or will the forces marshaled against him be victorious? The narrative, populated with believable, nuanced characters and anchored by its strong sense of place, blends science and fiction into an intriguing tale that keeps the suspense building as various subplots weave themselves into a complex tapestry. With several unexpected plot twists and some surprising reveals, readers will find themselves pulled into the telling of the tale from the outset. Less science fiction and more of a high-tech thriller [with a healthy dose of political machinations], readers will find this narrative difficult to set aside as the rapidly-unfolding story keeps those pages turning. Readers are certain to root for Jack to succeed in his mission [and the legal mumbo-jumbo that authorizes the “hijacking” of Columbia is pure genius]. It’s a rollicking adventure sure to please all space enthusiasts.Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I like Hickam's semi-autobiographical accounts of growing up in Coal Wood. Of being a Rocket Boy. Those are amongst the best I have ever read, and that ability to bring character of course to himself, as well as the child he was at the time is tremendous. And one should mention that he brings character to Coal Wood and all its environs and people much as Kellior does with Lake Woebegone. We are immersed.Turing to this entire work of fiction, we see the NASA space program as he does, as an insider. We see fictitious politicians who wish to stop the program and are pretty successful at it. And if Hickam with his knowledge is correct, a solution to many problems of the space program and of us here on earth.But it is a fiction and we have to suspend our disbelief. Because we do so, when the premise of taking the shuttle in the fashion that it is done, then I have to wonder at the science that is then given us. I am no space expert and I expect many who read this are like me, space hopefuls with no grounding in the realities of space. So when things like the EVA are done, I wonder if it is like Gravity, that just came out. How much is true and how much fiction. That is only one part of the disappointment, for the cliche of our lead characters past makes it hard to see them as well formed as those of Coal Wood and Hickam's earlier work. Too many characters, including those from the past in back flashes, that we have to spend time with. A few less of those, a few that we could have slimmed down and then worked with the leads more, and that would have elevated this for me. And perhaps getting rid of an illuminati like other power. Many books use it. When we one day prove the existence of such entities then perhaps seeing them in our fiction will round out such tales.A once read. For those who like space or love it, a book to get for some of what Hickam has given us you won't find so readily elsewhere.