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11+ Works 672 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Michael J. Neufeld is chair of the Space History Division of the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum.

Includes the name: Michael Neufeld

Works by Michael J. Neufeld

Associated Works

MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History — Winter 1999 (1998) — Author "The Road to Peenemünde" — 11 copies

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1951
Gender
male
Education
University of Calgary
University of British Columbia
Ph.D. in Modern European History from The Johns Hopkins University
Occupations
Smithsonian Curator of Space and Science
Short biography
Dr. Michael J. Neufeld is a Museum Curator in the Division of Space History. He served as Chair of the Division from January 2007 to January 2011. Born in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, in 1951, he received history degrees from the University of Calgary and the University of British Columbia, before getting a Ph.D. in Modern European History from The Johns Hopkins University in 1984. After teaching at various universities in upstate New York, Dr. Neufeld came to the Museum in 1988 as the A. Verville Fellow, and held Smithsonian and National Science Foundation fellowships in 1989-90.
Nationality
Canada
Birthplace
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Associated Place (for map)
Alberta, Canada

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Reviews

9 reviews
In this all encompassing biography of Von Braun something that stands out to me is how predestined his life really was, once you get past his rebellious dream to be a great engineer and achieve space flight. The best part of this book is the first third where Neufeld reconstructs the man's upbringing and one finds a polished scion of the Prussian "service" aristocracy, the sort of person born and bred to serve the German state and who would do so unquestioningly, so long as their caste show more entitlements were respected and they were offered glittering prizes to pursue; Von Braun was arguably never happier then after Hitler granted him the title of professor, such was his hunger for recognition. This being the case one can say that Von Braun was stained with the great sin of his class; unleashing the Nazis in the belief that they could be controlled in pursuit of the selfish conservative, nationalist agenda.

Assuming that I've gotten this all straight the outstanding, and at this point unanswerable, question is how much was Von Braun simply an opportunist on the make (the sort of man who was probably the foundation of the Nazi party) and how much he intellectually accepted the agenda of the Hitlerian regime. I tend more towards opportunist but there is no doubt in my mind that Von Braun should have been in the defendant's dock at a war-crime tribunal, if only as a witness, and he should really have never been offered American citizenship.

I might add that those who are looking less for a measured examination of the ills of the German nation and who want an epic of technological adventure will also not come away unsatisfied from this book.
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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 show more 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. show less
A rather serious book that focuses more on the politics and organizational challenges than on the technology and day to day operations. He also discusses the forced labor workers who worked not only at Peenemunde but also in the underground factories, worked literally to death in some cases. The book itself is rather dry and the political aspects tend to dominate the narrative. Only recommended to those who wish to study the subject.
This one took a while to finish since I left it at work and only read it at lunch times which rarely include much reading there.

Certainly someone who made a huge difference in mankind reaching into space. He also was responsible for great advancement in rocket arts leading to ballistic missiles.

This has been lauded as perhaps the fairest biography on von Braun, it explains his status and story of working for the Nazi party. He is responsible for his choices and their effects, but I don't show more think he is as huge a villain as some would have him be. He wanted to get to space and if he had to make missiles first than that is what did. He denied he was aware of working conditions of slave labor at some of the rocket plants. Which is possibly true according to the evidence the author researched.

People that are really interested in the history of space or rockets should be familiar with von Braun. I recommend this book for those people.
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Works
11
Also by
1
Members
672
Popularity
#37,564
Rating
3.8
Reviews
8
ISBNs
24
Languages
2

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