Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!lll-winken!ames!pasteur!ucbvax!FNAL.BITNET!HIGGINS From: HIGGINS@FNAL.BITNET (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey) Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: Re: request for book on history of planetary exploration Message-ID: Date: 24 Jan 89 22:39:00 GMT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 50 In response to the request by Tony Goodloe (ingr!b11!xenon!goodloe@uunet.uu.net) for books on the history of planetary probes, Larry Klaes posted a pretty good bibliography. But, naturally, he left out some that I would've recommended. I think *Far Travelers*, by Oran Nicks, is just the book Tony is looking for. Nicks was a NASA Headquarters project manager in the glorious Sixties, and reminisces about Ranger, Surveyor, various Mariners, and Viking. It's available from Government Printing Office bookstores in big cities, which take credit card orders over the phone, and which don't charge you for postage! Ask for NASA SP-480. The Chicago bookstore's phone number is (312)353-5133. The GPO bookstores also carry the mission-specific, semitechnical guides Larry and Stuart Warmink recommmended, such as *Pioneer: First to Jupiter, Saturn and Beyond* (SP-446) and *Pioneer Venus* (SP-461). Ask them for a catalog. (I haven't read these particular books, but I happened to have their SP numbers lying around.) Also don't forget the magic of Interlibrary Loan! If your library doesn't have the book you want, they will usually be happy to order it for you from somebody else's library. I am always astonished by this; it seems a godlike power... Larry, I was surprised that none of Henry S. F. Cooper's books made it onto your list. He has covered many NASA space programs for the *New Yorker* over the decades. Tony could look in his card catalog under Cooper's name and find out a lot about space probes. *Imaging Saturn* and *The Search for Life on Mars* spring to mind. On the other hand, his writing is a trifle bland (like so much *NY* writing), and his books seldom have photographs or indexes. I wonder if objections like these made you leave him off the list. (His latest book, *Before Liftoff*, was written for NASA's history program, not for the magazine, and has considerable verve AND photos AND an index. It's about Shuttle crew training.) I'd be interested in hearing what Larry or anybody else here thinks of Cooper. For that matter, how do you feel about other space writers? Whose books do you rush out and buy when you see a new one? Whose books do you avoid like the plague? ______meson Bill Higgins _-~ (no relation to Andrew Higgins) ____________-~______neutrino Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory - - ~-_ / \ ~----- proton Bitnet: HIGGINS@FNALB.BITNET | | \ / NEW! IMPROVED! SPAN/Hepnet/Physnet: 43011::HIGGINS - - Now comes with ~ Free Nobel Prizewinner Inside!