About This Book
A small American crew completes the first human landing on the moon, spending days orbiting and collecting specimens while weighing scientific goals against strict weight limits for the return. Interrupted communications with Earth and widespread national excitement frame their operations as they traverse a vast, cratered plain and examine the moon's lifeless surface, noting sparse remnants and dying volcanic activity. Crew debates over souvenirs are constrained by a two‑pound rule, and the captain reflects on the mission's human meaning amid the sterile, ash‑strewn landscape.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
3 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
Image of the Gods
by Alan Edward Nourse
Flowering Evil
by Margaret St. Clair
The Status Civilization
by Robert Sheckley
The Flaming Mountain: A Rick Brant Science-Adventure Story
by Harold L. Goodwin
De verliefde ezel
by Louis Couperus
The Abandoned Country; or, Frank Reade, Jr., Exploring a New Continent.
by Luis Senarens


