Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Spacesuit : A History through Fact and Fiction - Brett Gooden

Spacesuit

A History through Fact and Fiction

By: Brett Gooden

Hardcover | 1 January 2013

Sorry, we are not able to source the book you are looking for right now.

We did a search for other books with a similar title, however there were no matches. You can try selecting from a similar category, click on the author's name, or use the search box above to find your book.

Booktopia Comments

This book is featured in our Shoot for the Moon collection, a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the moon landing. Visit to see more of the best on all things astronautical.

Product Description
The space suit is an icon of space flight. It is the very symbol of interplanetary exploration - of pioneering adventure, of excitement and danger, and of man's quest to learn more of other worlds.

This book follows the remarkable history of the space suit through science fiction and fact. With an absorbing blend of drama and detail, Brett Gooden explains how this seemingly impossible dream gradually evolved into the complex suits of today and how the quest continues for the 'Mars and Beyond' suits of tomorrow. Man has dreamt of flying into space and walking on other planets for hundreds of years. But the risks to the human body involved in making this a reality only were only first recognized when, in the 1800s, an adventurous few climbed high mountains and took the first tentative steps into the sky under hydrogen filled balloons.

Gradually it became clear that to leave the earth's atmosphere and gravity, our frail bodies would need protection from many dangers. Jules Verne, in his epic novel Around the Moon in 1872, recognized this need and was one of the first to suggest that some form of suit, similar to that used by deep sea divers, might allow his space voyagers to venture safely into the vacuum outside their spaceship. In the period between the World Wars, daring pilots, competing with each other, ventured higher and higher into the thinner atmosphere. They challenged the physiologists and engineers to provide them with special suits to achieve this goal. At the same time, cheap pulp fiction magazines pumped out colorful adventures of humans in space. Their eye-catching cover illustrations became the archetypical feature of these 'pulps' and allowed artists to give vent to their wildest fantasy. Nevertheless, their inventive dreams for space suits fed back to the scientific community. Fiction influenced fact.

Complemented by astonishing and detailed illustrations, this book unlocks the seemingly impenetrable secrets of how the space suit was made into a practical and essential device. How simple everyday items such as the car tire, the caterpillar and the concertina provided critical clues that eventually brought the space suit to reality.

This is the fascinating, extraordinary and often bizarre story of the Space suit - through Fact and Fiction.

ILLUSTRATIONS: 155 colour & b/w illustrations
Industry Reviews
"finely detailed and analytical...will engage, inspire, and inform readers from advanced middle school through adults, regardless of their foreknowledge on the subject. Spacesuit, the book and the object itself, is an inspiring microcosm of astronautical history and engineering"--Spacetimes

Moon Missions Techs and Specs

Hasselblad and the Moon Landing - Debbie Ireland
Digital Apollo : Human and Machine in Spaceflight - David A. Mindell
Baikonur : Vestiges of the Soviet Space Programme - Jonk

RRP $79.99

$65.99

18%
OFF
Cosmic Culture : Soviet Space Aesthetics in Everyday Life - Dieter Seitz
International Space Station : Architecture Beyond Earth - David Nixon
Ignition! : An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark
How to Astronaut : An Insider's Guide to Leaving Planet Earth - Terry Virts
LEM Lunar Excursion Module Familiarization Manual - Grumman Aircraft Engineering Co.
Rockets and Missiles : The Life Story of a Technology - A. Bowdoin Van Riper
Back to the Moon : The Next Giant Leap for Humankind - Joseph Silk
The Apollo Guidance Computer : Architecture and Operation - Frank O'Brien
Interplanetary Robots : True Stories of Space Exploration - Rod Pyle
Moon : Architectural Guide - Paul Meuser