For All Mankind
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For All Mankind

For All Mankind

For All Mankind

by Harry Hurt
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Pr (1988-10)
ISBN: 0871131706
EAN: 9780871131706
Dewy Decimal #: 629.454
Hardcover: 16 pages
SKU: BX040-080606001
Condition: Used: Good First Edi
Comments: INSCRIBED/SIGNED BY AUTHOR -To Jim Stith, Best Wishes, Harry Hurt III, 10.26.88- Stated First Printing. DJ has light surface wear, not pricecut. A few dogears o/wise pgs crisp, clean, tight, unmarked. No remainder mark.


Editorial Reviews


Book Description
Between December 1968 and December 1972, twenty-four men captured the imagination of the world as they voyaged to the moon. For All Mankind presents a dramatic, engrossing, and comprehensive account of what President John F. Kennedy called "the most hazardous and dangerous and greatest adventure on which man has ever embarked." Based on exclusive interviews with the Apollo astronauts, For All Mankind contains the most comprehensive and revealing firsthand accounts of space travel ever assembled. This edition has been reissued in honor of the thirtieth anniversary of the first lunar landing.


Customer Reviews


Too many factual errors, EASY ONES, too bad.
Rating (2)
Date: 2006-06-14

1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful


OK, Chuck Yeager didn't break the sound barrier in the X-15. It was the X-1. They made a movie about it called "The Right Stuff."

After reading "For All Mankind" a couple of times right after Chaikin's "A Man on the Moon" and Murray's "Apollo", I'm really disappointed by the number of obvious errors. Some have already been pointed out above (including a couple that I missed in casual readings). This isn't like a Star Trek convention -- some of these things are blatant and easily corrected. And we're talking about common things that anyone can look up in an encyclopedia.

I actually like the style of the book, and the perspective from which he writes. I'm just not sure I can trust the facts in it when I know so many of them to be wrong. I believe though that all space fans that know the difference need to read this book, just to make sure they'll appreciate the others.



I Wish I Could Give It Zero Stars
Rating (1)
Date: 2006-03-08

8 out of 8 customers found this reveiw helpful


When this book came out late in 1988, the 20th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing was approaching. As you might expect, many books were published to commemorate--or capitalize on--this anniversary. Some of the books were quite good (Murray and Cox's excellent "Apollo: The Race to the Moon," for example, which came out at about the same time). "For All Mankind," however, is not one of the good ones.

The number and magnitude of errors in this book is nothing short of astounding. Like other reviewers, I wonder where the fact checkers were. I actually kept a list of errors as I slogged through this book, until the list got too long and I got tired of the exercise in frustration. It is obvious that the writer knew absolutely nothing about the technology that got us to the moon. It is beyond me why someone with so little knowledge of rocketry and spaceflight would undertake a book of this nature.

Don't believe me? Here's a little sample (as Dave Barry would say, "I swear I'm not making this up"):

On the technique used to ignite the Saturn V's five first-stage F-1 rocket engines: "A five-hundred-volt charge was shot through the ground cable on the launchpad, and into the trunk of the Saturn 5, where its spark ignited a mixture of highly flammable turboprop gases."

That is so wrong that I don't know where to start to correct it. Or how about this one, explaining why rockets work in space (where there is no air to "push against"): "The theory of jet propulsion...was a method for tapping the power of the entire universe...[t]he rocket got its power by exchanging the finite momentum generated by its own motors for the infinite momentum generated by the gravitational forces of the solar system."

That should make anyone who even slept through a high school science class cringe. And where are the astronauts while all this "momentum exchanging" is going on? "They literally had to hang upside down from the rafters with their feet locked in titanium clamps bolted to a crossbeam directly above their heads." Does this conjure up images of the intrepid Apollo astronauts blasting into orbit like so many bats in a church steeple?

It's hard to describe just how bad "For All Mankind" is. It's inconceivable to me that such a massively flawed, scientifically and technically inaccurate book could find its way to print as the purported story of perhaps the most significant scientific achievement in history. If you have a morbid fascination to see how badly an author who clearly knows nothing about his subject can mangle the facts, check "For All Mankind" out of a library. Otherwise, don't waste your time.


A few tidbits of interest, HUGE mistakes, contrarian analysis, stilted writing
Rating (1)
Date: 2006-02-17

2 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful


First, the three biggest mistakes, most specific to the book's theme (not the Steve Wozniak/Apple/floppy disk mistakes).

And, contrary to one reviewer who complained about negativity, the three mistakes I cite do NOT require "geekness" to recognize as mistakes.

1. The brightest star in the sky? It's "Sirius," not "Cereus."

2. The astronaut on Apollo 16 is "Charlie" Duke, not "Charley."

3. Jack Schmitt never flew on Gemini. He wasn't even selected as an astronaut in time for it to have been POSSIBLE for him to fly on Gemini.

The first mistake makes me wonder just how much Hurt knows about astronomy. The second and third make me wonder just how much he knows about the astronauts he supposedly interviewed as the core of this book.

That is seconded by things such as his unsupported claim that astronauts hated their geology courses here on earth. Totally untrue. Early astronauts may not have liked boring, chalkboard lectures, but ALL the astronauts who went on the last three, "scientific" missions, LOVED the field geology classes they took before flight and were gung-ho about applying this to lunar geology upon landing.

Throw in the fact that this book doesn't have an index, has only citation footnotes, not explanatory ones, and also has a fairly thin bibliography, and you get the impression this was some stream-of-consciousness type writing.

A MUCH better book is Andrew Chaikin's "A Man on the Moon."

I was torn between one and two stars for this book. I finally gave it 1 because the tidbits of learning in here just can't offset a poor style of writing and an uninformed one to boot; it might actually be worth two stars, but people rating it unnecessarily high had to be offset.


The negative reviewers remind me of the "Comic Book Guy" from the Simpsons
Rating (4)
Date: 2005-08-31

2 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful


You know the guy who attends Star Trek conventions and grills the actors about the various small holes in the plot....

The space geeks are really having a field day with some of the errors in the book. So be it. This is not a book for the most highly knowlegeable space geeks, anyway. What the book delivers is a compelling and very interesting drama that is far more personal (more quotes from astronauts and others in the program) than other books published at the time of this book's release.

I'm glad Harry Hurt III wrote this... it was a good read and was very enjoyable.


Interesting narrative idea but mistakes destroy it.
Rating (1)
Date: 2004-04-09

1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful


This book is written from a different point of view than most books about the Apollo program. Taking the readers through the trip to the moon and comparing the experiences of the various flights at each step of the way from lift-off to splashdown to life afterward for the astronauts. Usually most books describe each flight one at a time. The idea works quite well.

The problem is that sprinkled throughout the book are atrocious factual errors. These are not little errors but gigantic whoppers to anyone who knows anything about space travel and technology. Besides the things mentioned by other reviews the author seems to think jet propulsion and rocket propulsion are the same thing and I'm sure Steve Wozniak would be astounded to know that he invented the floppy disk and that that was the key to inventing the Apple. The original Apple didn't even have a floppy disk. Where were the editors and fact checkers? I was actually surprised that the author got right the fact that Velcro and Tang were NOT created for the space program.

Even with all the mistakes I did enjoy the book. But realizing that I recognized so many errors I have to wonder how many I did not pick up on. To me those mistakes make this book on the verge of fiction since I don't know what facts to trust.

I would give the book 3 stars based on the text, but I have to take away 2 stars for the errors.

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