The Cold War saw scientists in East and West racing to create amazing
new technologies, the like of which the world had never seen. Yet not
everyone was taken by surprise. From super-powerful atomic weapons to
rockets and space travel, readers of science fiction (SF) had seen it
all before.
Sometimes reality lived up to the SF vision, at other times it didn't.
The hydrogen bomb was as terrifyingly destructive as anything in
fiction, while real-world lasers didn't come close to the promise of the
classic SF ray gun. Nevertheless, when the scientific Cold War
culminated in the Strategic Defence Initiative of the 1980s, it was so
science-fictional in its aspirations that the media dubbed it "Star
Wars".
This entertaining account, offering a plethora of little known facts and
insights from previously classified military projects, shows how the
real-world science of the Cold War followed in the footsteps of SF - and
how the two together changed our perception of both science and
scientists, and paved the way to the world we live in today.