Ed White out for his spacewalk June 1965
Dragon Grace on its maiden voyage to the International Space Station.
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I just read/listened to the audio of the book "Orbital" by Samantha Harvey, winner of the Booker Prize. I had checked it out from our library's system Libby, and listened to it over a couple of weeks. I was warned it was due back in 3 days...so I would spend a bit more time each day listening to it. Sunday when it was due, it still played, and I had 7- 1/2 minutes left, when it stopped.
I could place it on hold and wait again, but of course won't. So I don't know the ending. But it was like it was a beginning to ending kind of book.
Read by a nice English woman (meaning with that accent rather than American). Is that the author? I can't find details anymore since it's been turned in.
The whole short book (5 hours) is about 6 astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS). Their thoughts as well as activities are throughout, and how they feel. What a wonderful glimpse into how different nationalities approach science and being away from their loved ones.
And of course they form their own community, a family if you will.
Wikipedia says this:
The novel, told over the course of 24 hours, follows six astronauts and cosmonauts from Japan, the United States, Britain, Italy, and Russia, four men and two women, aboard the International Space Station as they orbit Earth. In addition to detailing the official duties and tasks of the astronauts aboard the spacecraft, the novel also features their reflections about humanity and subjects including the existence or nature of God, the meaning of life, and existential threats such as climate change. Each chapter of the novel covers a single 90-minute orbit around Earth, with 16 orbits in the 24 hours.
Orbital draws upon the work and research of Carl Sagan and incorporates the use of the Cosmic Calendar, a concept developed by Sagan in his 1977 book The Dragons of Eden and on his 1980 television series Cosmos: A Personal Voyage.
It was published in 2023, and she wrote much of the book during COVID. It's fiction, but she gives enough details that I didn't know, it sounds as if she's familiar with the lives of the astronauts.
I highly recommend "Orbital."
Today's quote:
For us to transform as a society, we have to allow ourselves to be transformed as individuals. And for us to be transformed as individuals, we have to allow for the incompleteness of any of our truths and a real forgiveness for the complexity of human beings. |
ANGEL KYODO WILLIAMS |
An old photo:
Me and Sundance. I knew next to nothing about raising or training a dog. And I lived with a bunch of other people in a big house in Tallahassee at the time, who didn't like that I'd leave Sundance tied up when I went away sometimes. He barked a lot apparently. Oops. Here I'm visiting near the Sopchoppy River. My tee-shirt says "Penny Pincher" which was a little neighborhood kind of newspaper with ads as well as a few classifieds. I helped with doing layout, which was real 'cut and paste' back in the mid 70s.
Great post! I love the photo of you and Sundance.
ReplyDeleteTake care, enjoy your day and the week ahead.
Hi Eileen, so glad to see you so Early this morning!
DeleteWe've been watching the SciFi, Foundation where people do float about in space unharnessed. That caused me to think back to picture like this of astronauts in the emptiness of space, tethered by a single line. It’s a brave thing to do.
ReplyDeleteAnd I think someone actually did a space walk with a jet-pack without the tethered line! Free floating in space! It's all amazing to me!
DeleteLooked it up: Astronaut Bruce McCandless II became the first human being to do a spacewalk without a safety tether 1984
DeleteWe did cut and paste quite literally with scissors, tape and paste. My how times have changed.
Delete...I must be an outlier, space never interested me.
ReplyDeleteWell, you do have some interests that I enjoy seeing...barns, country roads, murals, good architecture!!
DeleteYes,layout was done with scissors and glue, remember that. Amazing when computers made it so much easier and faster. Also easier and faster to get wrong..insertions into the wrong places!
ReplyDeleteI'm always glad when astronauts get back safely, but I lived with a spouse who yammered on about space and NASA and was very excited, demanded that I be, too! There's a lot of that. I'd be just as happy to have left the moon alone.
Oh dear, what a shame to have a negative experience about space/travel to the moon. I guess living in FL I would have hoped to see a rocket take off...I think my kids did with their father once. When I visited the NASA display, I was taken aback by all the grammatical and spelling errors on the descriptions of photos. Geese, did those who typed the captions not get through high school!
DeleteCute picture of you and Sundance! I remember cut and paste. I edited a newsletter that way.
ReplyDeleteWe used exacto knives and glue sticks, so things could be moved around.
DeleteThat sounds like an interesting book. I need to get back into listening to books. I used to do that on my way to and from work--and hour commute each way gave me plenty of listening time.
ReplyDeleteLove the photo of you and Sundance!
I also listened while commuting to and from work, but seldom drive very far these days.
DeleteThe book sounds interesting. I can vividly remember watching those first grainy black and white films of the first moon landing as it happened.
ReplyDeleteI didn't watch all of them, and at a certain point it became pretty "old news." But then the shuttles changed, and disasters happened. I'm glad we did as much as we did.
DeleteGreat picture of you and Sundance!
ReplyDeleteThanks...not going into outer space, but at least caring for each otehr!
DeleteWhat a sweet photo!
ReplyDeleteTHanks, I was surprised it was even taken, at the time. Back in the days of Black and White film!
Delete