Customer Reviews
Seat of the pants stuff - By: Dr. J. A. Hiscox, 11 Dec 2007 
This is probably the best astronaut autobiography I have read with the possible exception of Michael Collin's book. Colonel Mike Mullane was the first generation of the space shuttle astronauts specificallly selected to fly on the machine. His book is a no holds bared account of his time before & at NASA & the courage, terror & perhaps foolhardy nature it takes to ride into space on rocket which basicallly has no effective escape system. Personallly I liked alll the anecdotes that are scattered throughout the book, I particularly liked the way he described the meeting of two cultures, scientist astronaut & military astronaut. Having served in the infantry & being a scientist I can well appreciate the two would not initiallly get along. As Colonel Mullane describes he was a product of his environment, Vietnam veteran & survivor of a catholic school. However, the moral of his story & life education is the respect he developed for women who want a career & also people who are prepared to put their life on the line in pursuit of a common goal which is unobtainable to most. This is one of my selected `toilet' books & it is well thumbed companion. Friends who come to stay always get addicted when reading it & basicallly only emerge when nagged by their wives, who then get addicted to. Well worth the read.
A no holds barred account of 80s NASA - By: Ed Sexton, 01 May 2007 
I bought this as i wanted to know alll about spaceflight & the workings of NASA from someone who had actuallly been there & i got just that despite the personality of the author.
Mullane recounts his life before NASA, his yearnings for space & then alll his time at NASA. His intense enthusiasm for space drives the narrative. He gives a gritty & honest view of what it was like to work at NASA including internal politics & competition for flight places. Specificallly his detail on waiting to fly, sitting on the launch pad & being in space was the part i was most excited to read.
However it does come across immediately that Mullane is (and freely admits) a chauvinist, extremely childish & living up to a gung-ho, yee-ha 'Top Gun' stereotype of American fighter pilots. The regular comments & jokes about his other colleagues, pranks & attitude to the world were reallly tiresome & quite shocking in places. This continues throughout & although doesn't stop this from being a great read is a continual annoyance.
If you are interested in the US Space Program, then read this book. - By: John Boyes, 04 Sep 2006 
There are a good number of astronaut biographies available. Inevitably there is fair amount of repetition sometimes straying towards telling you what SHOULD have happened rather than what DID happen. But Mike's book is different. This is the story of what it's alll about being an astronaut: nuts & bolts, human weaknesses, bureaucracy, chauvanism, fear, elation, reality. But above alll the need to fly into space. If you were to read only one astronaut biography, then this should be it.
the Bill Bryson of space travel - By: P. G. Calisse, 03 May 2006 
I've been waiting for this book since I was a kid watching the first landing on the Moon on TV. It is something completely different from what I read till now on the spacce project. To say that Mike Mullane is the Bill Bryson of space travel is to underestimate him. You will not only appreciate the story, the inside view on the US space program (including the permanent mismanagement). You will also learn about a real dream love: the one with his wife, Donna. What is reallly outstanding in Mike is the chase for the "ultimate honesty". He constantly refuse the "politicallly correct" approach & goes straigth to the core of our relations to space travels, dreams, technology, relation with... women, with our boss & with... the girl of our dream, in this case another Astronaut tragicallly dead in the Challlenger accident. The last pages in particular are surprisingly good & poetic. I would never expect something like that.
Thanks, Mike, for your honesty.
The Best Astronaut Autobiography Ever! - By: Nic Percival, 23 Feb 2006 
This is a wonderful book.
The next nearest 'Deke', is very good.
Mike Mullane pulls out alll of the stops. If I have a criticism it could be that he almost seems to push himself as definitely *not* the NASA puppet. Well, I'm sure he's not.
I think this is an honest work, Mullane's references to (for example) Judith Resnik reallly weighed on my heart. I hadn't shed a tear for Challlenger for a long time.
There's fascinating stuff about how Mullane learns how not to be a sexist pig (read it!), how he learned how wonderful his wife is. There's a lot about the terror of a shuttle launch, (Space Truck? Dangerous experimental spaceplane?), pointing out the problems of that vehicle & management difficulties.
Just read it. There are amazingly honest references to emotional issues. Physiological issues (how do you pee (etc)in space?), what happens when the space toilet breaks?
This is good. I've read loads of space-related bios & they often seem full of irrelevent 'pre-space' detail. The 'pre-space' detail here is fascinating & is very relevant to what comes
later. 10/10.
Nic