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Rocket Boys by Homer Hickam
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Rocket Boys

by Homer Hickam

Series: Coalwood (1)

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1,115233,453 (4.11)15
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Showing 1-5 of 23 (next | show all)
This was very well written and an interesting portrait of a time in American history that is gone. ( )
  vfranklyn | Oct 12, 2009 |
What an excellent tale! I couldn't wait to see what happened next. They certainly would not have been encouraged to experiment like that today. It was quite eye opening to see just how awful the coal industry could be for the workers and the companies that run the mines. I finally learned what a company town was.
  jschlei101 | Jul 26, 2009 |
This rather juvenile autobiography of a group of boys in a West Virginia coal mining town tells the story of their fascination with space in the days of Sputnik. One Book, One Waco picked this story for its spring 2009 read.

I enjoy literary and historical biographies when they relate to literature, for example Iris, the recent outstanding biography by Peter Conradi and Juliet Barker’s bio of Henry V and the Battle of Agincourt. But teen bios are not my thing. This story is amusing – to 14-year olds -- but not to me. I have an obligation to read it, but I would gladly invoke the rule of 50 here. Furthermore, I do not enjoy “fictionalized” biography.

To begin with the book has about 100 or more pages than necessary. All the stuff about unionizing mines and “Sonny’s” older brother’s football problems lack relevance to the rest of the story. Two pages on Homer getting a new kitten, pages and pages about the culture of football and how the players dated all the cute girls and ruled the school likewise detracted from the story of the rockets. A tighter focus on the rockets would have pleased me more.

Admittedly, the book is well written, and an interesting story. The final chapters on the last rocket designs, the boys learning calculus, and the science fair experiences are first rate. Had the entire book focused on the rocket boys, I would have enjoyed it a lot more. 3 stars

--Jim, 3/12/09 ( )
  rmckeown | Mar 12, 2009 |
great book and true story ( )
  gardener2510 | Feb 16, 2009 |
This is a funny biography. ( )
  MrsGClass | Feb 9, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 23 (next | show all)
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This book was re-released under the title October Sky (an anagram of Rocket Boys).
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Amateur chemistry

Coalwood, West Virginia

Homer Hickam

Rocket Boys

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 038533320X, Hardcover)

Inspired by Werner von Braun and his Cape Canaveral team, 14-year-old Homer Hickam decided in 1957 to build his own rockets. They were his ticket out of Coalwood, West Virginia, a mining town that everyone knew was dying--everyone except Sonny's father, the mine superintendent and a company man so dedicated that his family rarely saw him. Hickam's smart, iconoclastic mother wanted her son to become something more than a miner and, along with a female science teacher, encouraged the efforts of his grandiosely named Big Creek Missile Agency. He grew up to be a NASA engineer and his memoir of the bumpy ride toward a gold medal at the National Science Fair in 1960--an unprecedented honor for a miner's kid--is rich in humor as well as warm sentiment. Hickam vividly evokes a world of close communal ties in which a storekeeper who sold him saltpeter warned, "Listen, rocket boy. This stuff can blow you to kingdom come." Hickam is candid about the deep disagreements and tensions in his parents' marriage, even as he movingly depicts their quiet loyalty to each other. The portrait of his ultimately successful campaign to win his aloof father's respect is equally affecting. --Wendy Smith

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)

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