THE SECOND TIME AROUND—IS HARDER . . .

Decades after the last footprints were left on the Moon, the U.S. was preparing to return to the Lunar surface in a new class of rockets, when the mission suddenly became much more urgent. It would have to be a rescue mission.

Unbeknownst to the rest of the world China had sent its own Lunar expedition. A manned expedition. Until a distress call was received, no human outside of China even knew that the mission was manned—or that their ship had crash-landed and couldn’t take off again.

Time was running out, and if the four Chinese astronauts were to be rescued, the American lunar mission would have to launch immediately, with only a skeleton crew. Once the heroic U.S. astronauts were underway the army of engineers and scientists back home had the daunting task of deciding what equipment could be left on the Moon to permit the Lunar lander vehicle vehicle to lift safely from the Moon with the two U.S. astronauts and the four stranded Chinese taikonauts! Could the U.S. mount such a mission successfully—and would thousands of years of instilled honor “allow” the Chinese astronauts to accept a rescue?

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Travis S. Taylor—“Doc” Taylor to his friends—has earned his soubriquet the hard way: He has a doctorate in optical science and engineering, a master's degree in physics, a master's degree in aerospace engineering, a master's degree in astronomy, and a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering. Dr. Taylor has worked on various programs for the Department of Defense and NASA for the past sixteen years. He's currently working on several advanced propulsion concepts, very large space telescopes, space-based beamed energy systems, and next generation space launch concepts. He has appeared in several episodes of the History Channel’s Universe series. He lives in Auburn, AL with his wife Karen and their daughter.

Les Johnson is a NASA physicist, manager, author, husband and father. By day, he serves as the Deputy Manager for the Advanced Concepts Office at the NASA George C. Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, one of the coolest jobs in the universe. In the early 2000s, he was NASA’s Manager for Interstellar Propulsion Research and later managed the In-Space Propulsion Technology Project. He was technical consultant for the movie Lost in Space and has appeared on the Discovery Channel series, “Physics of the Impossible” in the “How to Build a Starship” episode. He has also appeared in three episodes of the Science Channel series, Exodus Earth. In his spare time he writes popular science books and articles, including Solar Sails: A Novel approach to Interplanetary Travel, Living Off the Land in Space: Green Roads to the Cosmos and Paradise Regained: The Regreening of Earth.

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    The more you know about space exploration--it's past, present, likely future, and its politics--the less you're likely to enjoy this. Little more than a Hallmark Card for the Constellation program and an appeal to US supremacy and "boots and flags" space exploration. I hoped, given the authors' backgrounds, that they might weave a credible and reasonable story. Wrong. A few "facts", some techno-mumble, and a juvenile story... OK... then they throw in political preaching and caricatures that appeal to dumbed-down memes, and it becomes NOT-OK: triumphant capitalism; US/NASA heroes; and nefarious Chinese. (Yeah, the Chinese are going to "steal the moon". Studied their space program much? Obviously not.) It propagates the worst space cadet myths and jingoism. This is fantasy as much as dragons and wizards, but clothed in "science" and "facts"--of which much is dubious. (A 13MT Lunar orbiter launched from an an Atlas V--even the paper HLV? A commercial TSTO ram/scram-jet capable of Lunar transit while the rest of the world suffers with conventional "dumb" boosters?) Go read the freely available Augustine, VSE and ESAS reports from NASA. Much more entertaining and you'll be much better informed. In short, a waste of time and money, and not recommended--wait for it to end up in the free library. [P.S. And to the obviously gratuitous comments in the story such as "No more boring robotic landers and ridiculous rovers." are insulting.]

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    Very enjoyable. The constant life and death struggle where something new always goes wrong is the only thing that makes the story a little less than believable. On the other hand Murphy's never nice. On the gripping hand, the concurrence of 3 separate moon endeavors simultaneously seems far fetched too.
    Nonetheless excellent science, good story telling, and great adventure!

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