One of the most exhilarating true adventures in history, the race into
space was marked by courage, duplicity, political paranoia, astonishing
technological feats, and unbelievable triumphs in the face of
overwhelming adversity. It is the story of an unparalleled rivalry
between superpowers and of the two remarkable men at the center of the
conflict. On the American side was Wernher von Braun, the
camera-friendly former Nazi scientist, who was granted hero status and
almost unlimited resources by a government panicked at the thought of
the Cold War enemy taking the lead. The Soviet program was headed by
Sergei Korolev, a former political prisoner whose identity was a closely
guarded state secret. Korolev was expected to--and did--work miracles on
a shoestring budget, his cooperation assured through intimidation and
threats of possible disgrace or death. These rivals were opposite in
every way, save for one: each was obsessed with the idea of launching a
man to the Moon.
Deborah Cadbury's extraordinary history combines action and suspense
with a moving portrayal of the space race's human dimension. Using
source materials never before available, she tells a riveting story of
the espionage, ambition, ingenuity, and passion behind humankind's
mind-bending voyage beyond the bounds of Earth.