Having read literally dozens of books about the US space program, not to mention completing a 1980 master’s thesis on Eisenhower’s space science policy, I maintain that Appointment on the Moon by Richard S. Lewis is still the best single volume account of the quest for space from inception through the Apollo 11 mission. He captures not only the man-in-space initiative but also the satellite and space probe projects such as Telstar, Explorer, Tiros, and Pioneer, that kept us all fascinated through the early years of the 1960s.
The book carries a copyright of 1969, and I first read it many years ago. To be honest, with the current sh** show of the world in late 2025, I re-read the book needing a major dose of nostalgia. Lewis delivers that, capturing the excitement with first-hand descriptions from his work as a science journalist covering the events as they happened. And don’t let the “journalist” attribution put you off. As the NASA website describes him, “Richard ‘Dick’ S. Lewis was a science reporter who had tremendous credibility and made a real difference in the world.” Appointment on the Moon is a classic.