“Thrilling . . . an important tale of how American ingenuity and entrepreneurial spirit is creating a new type of space age.”—Walter Isaacson, New York Times bestselling author of Elon Musk
Musk vs. Bezos. China vs. the United States. The government vs. the private sector.
Welcome to the rivalries and alliances defining the New Space Age. At stake? Trillions of dollars, national prestige, and a place in the history books.
“A fine piece of reporting; historians will be able to use this first draft of rocket history to craft deeper analyses of our first real steps as a space-faring society.”—The New York Times
Moon landings and space walks once captivated the public’s attention. But, in recent decades, the U.S. space enterprise has felt moribund. Now, that’s finally about to change.
A fleet of powerful new rockets is poised to take humans into the cosmos more than ever before. A lunar land rush has sparked a geopolitical competition among nations. And the world’s two richest men have engaged in escalating brinkmanship, as NASA and the U.S. government embraces Silicon Valley innovation to jump-start the nation’s ambitions.
Space has entered a golden age, and this is just the beginning. In this gripping work, award-winning Washington Post writer Christian Davenport chronicles the mad scramble to shape humanity’s off-planet future. He takes readers behind the scenes at NASA and the Pentagon as China’s aggressive moon mining plans raise alarms, onto the sprawling Cape Canaveral factory where Blue Origin is working toward Amazon-style lunar deliveries, and onto SpaceX launch pads as Musk’s engineers log 100-hour weeks—leaving veteran astronauts marveling that they’re now operating “flying iPhones.”
What will happen as human ambition outpaces governmental regulation? Which country will win the race back to the moon? Was Donald Trump’s much-derided creation of the Space Force a surprising act of foresight, and will the U.S. finally make a real push to the moon and eventually toward Mars?
Masterfully paced, rigorously reported, and vividly told, Rocket Dreams offers a riveting, fly-on-the-wall account of the grit-fueled global battle to push humankind further into the cosmos—revealing that the science fiction dreams of the last century may soon become our reality.
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Christian Davenport
Chapter 1
“I Get This Angry Twice in a Year”
Jeff Bezos was fuming—so angry his eyes bulged. The multibillionaire was aboard his private jet, a Gulfstream G650 with a flight attendant and a bar stocked with Tomatin thirty-year-old, single malt Scotch. The other passengers were executives from Blue Origin, the space exploration company he’d founded. They were en route to Washington, D.C., to pitch the leadership of NASA on a plan to build a spacecraft that could bring cargo and supplies to the surface of the moon. As Bezos reviewed the proposal his team had worked up, he found it so deficient as to be enraging. The wording was sloppy, the ideas timid, not fully formed. At Amazon, such a weak effort would never be tolerated, he said. “I get this angry twice in a year and it’s always because of the decisions Blue Origin makes,” Bezos said.
It was March 1, 2017, and it was hard to believe that just three days earlier Bezos had been basking in the televised limelight of the Oscars. Several Amazon-produced movies had been nominated for awards, including Manchester by the Sea, the dark but compelling feature film starring Casey Affleck. “It’s a huge honor, and we’re seriously fortunate,” Bezos said on the red carpet, wearing a custom, slim-fitting tuxedo. Nothing conferred acceptance to Hollywood society like an appearance in the Oscar host’s monologue, and cameras caught Bezos in the audience laughing after Jimmy Kimmel made a joke at his expense: “If you win tonight, you can expect your Oscar to arrive in two to five business days, possibly stolen by a Grubhub delivery man.” Amazon won three Academy Awards, among the first ever awarded to a streaming service, and Bezos later showed up in triumph at the ultimate insider event: Madonna’s after-party, where he marveled at the singer’s stamina on the dance floor.
Now, on his private jet, his Oscar glow had vanished. The document in front of him—Blue Origin’s proposal to sell its lunar lander to NASA—was all wrong.
Bezos was big on memos. At Amazon, meetings often began with “study hall,” in which a team leader passed around a six-page document outlining an idea, and the group sat quietly reading for as long as thirty minutes. Bezos valued clear writing as a means to deep thinking, and six pages was long enough to showcase both. Anything shorter and the author could get away with faking it. Six pages allowed Bezos to see ideas in full—which ones were good and which were bad. As he wrote in a 2004 email to Amazon employees, “The narrative structure of a good memo forces better thought and better understanding of what’s more important than what, and how things are related. PowerPoint-style presentations somehow give permission to gloss over ideas, flatten out any sense of relative importance and ignore the interconnectedness of ideas.” Bezos himself spent weeks, even months, crafting a letter to Amazon shareholders each year. The title of the 2017 memo was “Building a Culture of High Standards,” and in it he discussed the value of writing well. “The great memos are written and re-written, shared with colleagues who are asked to improve the work, set aside for a couple of days, and then edited again with a fresh mind.”
On his plane, Bezos berated three of the Blue Origin executives behind the NASA memo—Rob Meyerson, A. C. Charania, and Brett Alexander—who were falling short, he said, of the level of leadership that he had built at Amazon. “Amazon operates on a world-class level in terms of its decision-making. I want Blue Origin to be on that level.”
It wasn’t the first time the Blue Origin executives had found themselves in their boss’s crosshairs. More than one recalled him saying that meeting with them “is like shoving bamboo shoots under my fingernails.” At Amazon, as they knew, he was famous for the outbursts that could quickly turn cruel.
“I’m sorry, did I take my stupid pills today?”
“Are you lazy or just incompetent?”
“We need to apply some human intelligence to the problem.”
Along with another zinger that could have applied here on the plane: “This document was clearly written by the B team. Can someone get me the A-team document? I don’t want to waste my time with the B-team document.”
Comparing Blue Origin to Amazon, however, wasn’t entirely fair. One of the executives, Charania, had only been at the company for a couple of months. And while Bezos had built Amazon from the ground up, shaping every aspect of its culture and ethos as it moved from books to retail to movies, he spent just one day a week—Wednesday—working at Blue Origin, a start-up that did not even have a chief executive officer. Its employees had gotten used to Bezos’s pointed criticisms. Their lunar lander was called Blue Moon, and Bezos hadn’t been happy with that, either. Couldn’t they come up with something better? Bezos had wondered at an earlier meeting. There was the Elvis Presley song with the same name, and a beer as well. The moniker felt like a cliché, not the sort of thing that would roll smoothly out of the mouth of a modern-day Walter Cronkite narrating the next lunar landing to a live audience. Ultimately, Bezos had swallowed his pride and embraced one of the mantras he had created at Amazon: Disagree and commit, allowing the project to move forward.
This time, Bezos refused to compromise. The NASA memo, particularly the first few pages, didn’t convey nearly enough vision or technical detail, he thought. Finally, he ended his diatribe, took one of his employees’ laptops, and spent the rest of the plane ride editing it himself.
The reason Bezos and his team were flying to NASA headquarters could be traced directly to the fact that Donald J. Trump had won the 2016 presidential election a few months earlier. Under his administration, NASA would be tasked with returning astronauts to the moon. If many of Trump’s initial policies were unpredictable and chaotic, the product of infighting among his hastily assembled team of advisers, the small cadre involved in space policy had rallied around the moon as NASA’s next destination.
Of course, the United States had already been to the moon—on six different Apollo missions almost a half century earlier. But the retro-sounding idea to return to the lunar surface was actually not so retro. The moon the Trump administration sought to return to was not the cold, dead rock that America chose to stop visiting after the Apollo era. Instead, it was a new moon, one that scientists now knew had been guarding precious resources for eons—a potential oasis with water hidden in the permanently shadowed craters at the poles. Since the moon’s axial tilt is only about 1.5 degrees—compared to 23.5 degrees for Earth—the sun barely rises over the lunar horizon, giving the region its most defining feature: an ethereal, curious light that casts long, jagged shadows, creating a checkered panorama of light and dark—with peaks illuminated by continuous sunlight and caverns in perpetual Stygian blackness.
Water is vital to sustain human life, but its component parts, hydrogen and oxygen, could also be used as rocket fuel, potentially making the moon a gas station on the highway to the rest of the solar system, namely Mars. Not only that, the water, which has existed in the form of ice for billions of years, is like a Rosetta Stone time capsule that scientists say could tell the story of the formation of our closest neighbor in the solar system, as well as answer vital questions about Earth itself. How it...
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Hardcover. Zustand: new. Hardcover. Thrilling . . . an important tale of how American ingenuity and entrepreneurial spirit is creating a new type of space age.Walter Isaacson, New York Times bestselling author of Elon MuskMusk vs. Bezos. China vs. the United States. The government vs. the private sector.Welcome to the rivalries and alliances defining the New Space Age. At stake? Trillions of dollars, national prestige, and a place in the history books.A fine piece of reporting; historians will be able to use this first draft of rocket history to craft deeper analyses of our first real steps as a space-faring society.The New York TimesMoon landings and space walks once captivated the publics attention. But, in recent decades, the U.S. space enterprise has felt moribund. Now, thats finally about to change.A fleet of powerful new rockets is poised to take humans into the cosmos more than ever before. A lunar land rush has sparked a geopolitical competition among nations. And the worlds two richest men have engaged in escalating brinkmanship, as NASA and the U.S. government embraces Silicon Valley innovation to jump-start the nations ambitions.Space has entered a golden age, and this is just the beginning. In this gripping work, award-winning Washington Post writer Christian Davenport chronicles the mad scramble to shape humanitys off-planet future. He takes readers behind the scenes at NASA and the Pentagon as Chinas aggressive moon mining plans raise alarms, onto the sprawling Cape Canaveral factory where Blue Origin is working toward Amazon-style lunar deliveries, and onto SpaceX launch pads as Musks engineers log 100-hour weeksleaving veteran astronauts marveling that theyre now operating flying iPhones. What will happen as human ambition outpaces governmental regulation? Which country will win the race back to the moon? Was Donald Trumps much-derided creation of the Space Force a surprising act of foresight, and will the U.S. finally make a real push to the moon and eventually toward Mars?Masterfully paced, rigorously reported, and vividly told, Rocket Dreams offers a riveting, fly-on-the-wall account of the grit-fueled global battle to push humankind further into the cosmosrevealing that the science fiction dreams of the last century may soon become our reality. "A riveting, fly-on-the-wall account of the New Space Age, chronicling Elon Musk's dominant SpaceX, Jeff Bezos's resurgent Blue Origin, and the high-stakes, grit-fueled global battle to push humankind further into the cosmos-from an Emmy and Peabody award-winning Washington Post reporter"-- Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 9780593594117
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