My Cart

loader
Loading...

The Passenger: Volume 11 - Space


  • Europa Editions (Faber)
In the 1960s, the rivalry between the superpowers brought us into space, adding a whole new dimension to human life. The last frontier was open: between 1969 and 1972 twelve men (but no women) walked on the moon. No one has since. The space race revealed itself for what it really was: a political and military competition.

ISBN 9781787704190 | EN | PB
€27,95
available
Quantity
More Information
Publisher Europa Editions (Faber)
ISBN 9781787704190
Publication date October 2022
Edition Paperback
Dimensions 240 x 160 mm
Pages 192
Language(s) English ed.
Description

"These books are so rich and engrossing that it is rewarding to read them even when one is stuck at home."-TLS
"Fresh and diverting, informative and topical." -Australian Financial Review, Best Books of the Year


Night, Sleep, Death and the Stars by Lauren Groff·The Universe Underground by Paolo Giordano·We All Hated Each Other So Much by Frank Westermann·Plus: discovering new planets and destroying satellites; returning to the Moon (this time to stay); the Mars delusion; the hunt for extra-terrestrial life, and much more…
In the 1960s, the rivalry between the superpowers brought us into space, adding a whole new dimension to human life. The last frontier was open: between 1969 and 1972 twelve men (but no women) walked on the moon. No one has since. The space race revealed itself for what it really was: a political and military competition.
Space agencies, however, have not been idle and the exploration of the solar system has continued with probes and robots. Without politics, science has thrived. But the lack of government funding has opened space exploration to the forces of capitalism: the race has started again, with different rules and different players.
For those of us who remain on Earth, space offers a spiritual dimension, and the search for answers to age-old questions. Colonizing Mars might not be the solution to humanity's problems, but the promise of space-whether expressed in a tweet by Elon Musk or a photo taken by a NASA rover on Mars-keeps proving irresistible.