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Loading... Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of Warby Michael J. Neufeld
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. It seems odd that there's never been a full-scale, objective biography of rocket engineer Wernher von Braun until now, but Neufeld is the perfect person to write it. He seems to have been going for "exhaustive" rather than "readable," however, which seems to be a common problem with biography these days. ( )I caught this magisterial biography on C-SPAN's Booknotes and immediately ordered it. An amoral technocrat who didn't care which flag he engineered under (unless it was expedient to), von Braun punched holes in Antwerp and London... and got us to the Moon. Within a decade von Braun's moral gyroscope, such as it was, yawed from slave labor (he was an SS-Sturmbannfuhrer) to pitching space flight in Collier's magazine and on Disney's Man in Space. Researched using the primary sources in both German and English, this biography indeed presents "a man in full" more than capable of complicity in war crimes, managing vast engineering enterprises, and charming the American public. A cautionary moral tale from the Third Reich, the Space Race, and the Cold War, this biography -which could only have been written years after the Cold War- is highly recommended for space buffs & students of the mid-20th century alike. no reviews | add a review
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The first authoritative biography of Wernher von Braun, chief rocket engineer of the Third Reich—creator of the infamous V-2 rocket—who became one of the fathers of the U.S. space program. In this meticulously researched and vividly written life, Michael J. Neufeld gives us a man of profound moral complexities, glorified as a visionary and vilified as a war criminal, a man whose brilliance and charisma were coupled with an enormous and, some would say, blinding ambition.
As one of the leading developers of rocket technology for the German army, von Braun yielded to pressure to join the Nazi Party in 1937 and reluctantly became an SS officer in 1940. During the war, he supervised work on the V-2s, which were assembled by starving slave laborers in a secret underground plant and then fired against London and Antwerp. Thousands of prisoners died—a fact he well knew and kept silent about for as long as possible.
When the Allies overran Germany, von Braun and his team surrendered to the Americans. The U.S. Army immediately recognized his skills and brought him and his colleagues to America to work on the development of guided missiles, in a covert operation that became known as Project Paperclip. He helped launch the first American satellite in 1958 and headed NASA’s launch-vehicle development for the Apollo Moon landing.
Handsome and likable, von Braun dedicated himself to selling the American public on interplanetary travel and became a household name in the 1950s, appearing on Disney TV shows and writing for popular magazines. But he never fully escaped his past, and in later years he faced increasing questions as his wartime actions slowly came to light.
Based on new sources, Von Braun is a brilliantly nuanced portrait of a man caught between morality and progress, between his dreams of the heavens and the earthbound realities of his life.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:11 -0400)
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