Jim Lovell & Jeffrey Kluger, Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13 (Houghton Mifflin, 1994)
Rewatching the Tom Hanks/Ron Howard film Apollo 13 for the umpteenth-thousandth time after reading Jim Lovell's input gives this story an easy-going air, like he's sitting back in the study, sharing a drink with you while chatting about old war stories. It's a very intimate feeling, like he's giving you a clandestine peek at the behind-the-scenes goings-on that civilians aren't normally allowed to see. Yet even when Lovell isn't relating the events from his first-person vantage point, that "I was there" immediacy still comes through, odd as that may sound. In fact, probably my favorite passage in the book dealt with an obscure event Lovell most probably didn't hear about until years later. Coincidentally, it's also one of the funniest stories in the annals of the U.S. space program, equal to the "jalape–o wrapped with a bow" scene from Tom Wolfe's space-age masterpiece The Right Stuff (and if you don't instantly know what I'm referring to, go read that book too. It's not something I can -- or should -- explain to proper effect).
It's a little-known fact that the Apollo command and service module manufacturing contract was hotly contested among U.S. aerospace companies, with the lunar module contract being considered something of a poor consolation prize. The reason was simple -- while the lunar modules would have the glory job of actually landing astronauts on the moon, their long-term uses were very limited, whereas the Apollo command and service module configuration was expected to be the workhorse of the U.S. space program for years to come, and thus a more valuable prize, since production would continue long after lunar module production shut down. That North American Rockwell had won the command module contract, leaving Grumman with the less-desirable lunar module, had not gone unacknowledged among the two sets of engineers, and something of a silent rivalry had formed between them. Towards the end of the Apollo 13 mission, once it became clear that the Aquarius had saved the day and the astronauts would survive, a curious invoice began circulating among the Grumman engineers at NASA: "Towing, $4.00 first mile, $1,00 each additional mile. Total charge, $400,001.00. Battery charge, road call. Customer's jumper cables. Total $4.50. Oxygen at $10.00/lb. Total, $500.00. Sleeping accommodations for 2, no TV, air conditioned with radio (additional guest in room at $8.00/night)." And so on it went, covering everything from luggage handling to gratuities. The joke invoice, of course, was eventually delivered to Rockwell, and while Lovell doesn't address the matter, it's a virtual certainty that those folks failed to see the brilliance of the humor.
That's the sort of immediacy this book holds from cover to cover; be it Lovell's near-disastrous night flight off the coast of Japan during his tour on an aircraft carrier, his nerve-wracking test pilot days, designing rockets as a boy, flying the two-man Gemini spacecraft or orbiting the moon over Christmas in 1968 during the unforgettable Apollo 8 mission, Lovell and Kluger deliver. There are many books out there on the Apollo program, but none can touch the unique nature of Apollo 13 -- America's most successful failure. |
![]() Rambles.NET book review by Jayme Lynn Blaschke 31 May 2000 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |