Reading List: National Astronomy Day

May 18 is Astronomy Day. Established in 1973 by astronomer Doug Berger, Astronomy Day is designed to share the joy of astronomy with the general public. We’ve curated a list of books that are sure to have you gazing toward the stars in wonder . . . after you finish reading of course!

The Light of Earth

AL WORDEN WITH FRANCIS FRENCH

Apollo 15 command module pilot Al Worden was one of the highest-profile personalities among the Apollo astronauts, renowned for his outspokenness and potent views but also recognized as a warm and well-liked person who devoted much of his life after retiring from NASA to sharing his spaceflight experiences. His candid, entertaining, and unique perspective in The Light of Earth will captivate and surprise.

Teacher in Space

COLIN BURGESS

On January 28, 1986, NASA space shuttle orbiter Challenger lifted off into the clear blue skies over Florida on mission STS-51L, carrying a crew of seven, including teacher Christa McAuliffe. Just seventy-three seconds into the launch, a massive explosion tore Challenger apart. This newly revised edition of Teacher in Space tells the story of how McAuliffe graduated from her role as a much-loved high school teacher to occupying a seat on the veteran orbiterā€™s tenth and last flight into space.

The Skylark of Space

E. E. “DOC” SMITH

Brilliant government scientist Richard Seaton discovers a remarkable faster-than-light fuel that will power his interstellar spaceship, The Skylark. His ruthless rival, Marc DuQuesne, and the sinister World Steel Corporation will do anything to get their hands on the fuel. They kidnap Seaton’s fiancĆ©e and friends, unleashing a furious pursuit and igniting a burning desire for revenge that will propel The Skylark across the galaxy and back.

Infinity Beckoned

JAY GALLENTINE

Infinity Beckoned illuminates a critical period of space history when humans dared an expansive leap into the inner solar system. With an irreverent and engaging style, Jay Gallentine conveys the trials and triumphs of the people on the ground who conceived and engineered the missions that put robotic spacecraft on the heavenly bodies nearest our own.

Butterfly Nebula

LAURA REECE HOGAN

Winner of the Backwaters Prize in Poetry, Butterfly Nebula reaches from the depths of the sea to the edges of space to chart intersections of the physical universe, the divine, the human, and the constantly unfolding experience of being ā€œone thing in the act of becoming another.ā€ Our desire for purpose and renewal collides with the vast constellation of divine possibility in this collection, which invites the reader to enter a transformative world both deeply interior and embracing of the far-flung cosmos.

The Transit of Venus

SUSAN FIRER

In Firer’s poems, place, often the western shore of Lake Michigan, provides an imagistic and sonic landscape in which language explores the ’empire of skin’ with its daily happinesses and sorrows, gifts and losses. Often blue light illuminates these poems and frequently the language of a Catholic childhood shows up. Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams’s poems say ‘Use everything,’ and Firer does: receipts, anatomy, astronomy, clothes poles, paintings, checklists, quagga mussels, questions and grapefruit.

The Ultimate Engineer

RICHARD JUREK

From the late 1950s to 1976, the U.S. human spaceflight program advanced as it did largely due to the extraordinary efforts of Austrian immigrant George M. Low. Described as the ā€œultimate engineerā€ during his career at NASA, Low was a visionary architect and leader from the agencyā€™s inception in 1958 to his retirement in 1976. The Ultimate EngineerĀ sheds new light on one of the most fascinating and complex personalities of the golden age of U.S. human space travel.

It’s a Question of Space

CLYATON C. ANDERSON

Having spent over 150 days on his first tour of the International Space Station, itā€™s safe to say that Clayton C. Anderson knows a thing or two about space travel. Now retired, Anderson has fielded thousands of questions over the years about spaceflight, living in space, and what itā€™s like to be an astronaut. Written with honesty and razor-sharp wit, Itā€™s a Question of Space gathers Andersonā€™s often humorous answers to these questions and more in a book that will beguile young adults and space buffs alike.

Homesteading Space

DAVID HITT, OWEN GARRIOTT, AND JOE KERWIN

Homesteading Space is much more than a story of technological and scientific success; it is also an absorbing, sometimes humorous, often inspiring account of the determined, hardworking individuals who shepherded the program through a near-disastrous launch, a heroic rescue, an exhausting study of Comet Kohoutek, and the lab’s ultimate descent into the Indian Ocean.

Into That Silent Sea

FRANCIS FRENCH AND COLIN BURGESS

These pages chronicle a varied and riveting cavalcade of human stories, including a look at Yuri Gagarinā€™s harrowing childhood in war-ravaged Russia and Alan Shepardā€™s firm purchase on the American dream. Through dozens of interviews and access to Russian and American official documents and family records, the authors bring to life the experiences that shaped the lives of the first astronauts and cosmonauts and forever changed their world and ours.


For further reading, check out Becoming a Space Age Adventurer: The Story Behind a Book Combining Space Sites with Space Stories or Outward Odyssey authors’s reflections on the 2022 launch of Artemis I.

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