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About the Author

William E. Burrows is the author of Deep Black: Space Espionage and National Security, and is a former reporter for The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal. He is the founder and director of New York University's graduate Science and Environmental Reporting Program, and show more lives with his wife in Connecticut show less

Works by William E. Burrows

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Common Knowledge

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8 reviews
In my opinion this is one of the most important books of our era. It argues that our space program, which has lacked a goal for so long, can and should be focused on the protection of Earth from disasters and the preservation of backup data about our civilization on the moon (which would, of course, also lead to all the other benefits of colonizing the moon). It's a hopeful, inspiring book that everyone -- not just space enthusiasts -- should read.
This seems to be a decent biography and it appears the author did his research before writing. He mentions that some original material was destroyed in WWII. The final chapters deal with the legacy of the Baron and how his memory and actions were used during and after the war. If not for the war it is possible Richthofen never would have flown a plane. The war gave him the opportunity to fly and develop the skills that made him the famed warrior. He was a hunter before he every flew for the show more first time and he used his knowedge of hunting hone his arial hunting skills.

It is always interesting to note the genuine respect arial enemies had for each other. Frequently their relations were starkly different from the infantry in the trenches.


"The tendancy to compensate for ones deficiencies by sinking them in to the glorious achievements of more furtunate mortals may be an ever-present feature of social life." - Sidney Hook


This book was published in 1969. Significant perhaps because of the social distain to heroes and war during the Vietnam conflict that was taking place at the time. However, there have been anti war movements constantly during the last 100 years and they do not always effect all history or literature publshed in their time periods but certainly may. In this case the back cover talkes about how the German war department looked for someone they could glorify to keep up moral with the war effort going poorly and they selected Richtofen. It is possible to overglorify war or those that do heroic things during war. It is highly possible that the Baron would not have had the legendary status he has retained for so long had he not died during the conflict and been remembered as a martyr.
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I learned a lot about Cold War strategic reconnaissance as the author cited several persons whom I have met or worked with. The book also revealed how foolishly the two countries acted in the post WWII period to the present. It was almost a professional read, and should have been so for us "crew dogs."
The Infinite Journey written by Willam E. Burrows tells of the history of many NASA missions into space. It has several reports of astronauts and engineers, which is awesome because it lets the reader get a feeling of what it was like and a sense of the ergency of some of the problems or emergencies that occured. However the book has an average reading level of a 9th grader but there are so many perspectives that the book is really all over the place. Between the narative and the actual show more accounts of the astronauts there is a huge jump in reading level and can be some what confusing. In the sense of the quality of the book though, I would give it an B+. show less
½

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Works
13
Members
925
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#27,744
Rating
3.8
Reviews
6
ISBNs
33

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