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Infinity Beckoned: Adventuring Through the Inner Solar System, 1969–1989

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What we know today about the Moon, Mars, and Venus has been erected on a colorful foundation of human experience reaching back to the 1960s. Where to begin?
- A flawless machine telling us that Mars had life was conjured-up by a guy who’d only been trying to provide clean water.
- Soviet moon rovers were puppeteered by hush-hush five-man teams working behind three layers of guarded gates inside a top-secret, off-the-map town without even a name.
- The dreamers responsible for landing on Venus realized that dropping down through heavy clouds of sulfuric acid and 900-degree heat was best accomplished by surfing.
- Soviet Russia’s director of planetary missions absolutely hated the job. But he spent fifteen years there anyway, enduring a paranoid bureaucracy where even the copy machines were strictly regulated.

Why did these people do it? Drawn to the unknown – to the majestic mystery of just what lay out there in the great beyond – they submitted to curiosity and wonder. In sum, Infinity Beckoned.

This new work by Jay Gallentine delivers a rich complement of never-before-heard stories from first-person perspectives. Built upon a slew of brand-new interviews, Infinity Beckoned provides an immediate human context. It’s not even about space so much as it is about driven people engaged in brand-new undertakings. Learn how the clean-water machine got to Mars. How the top-secret town came to be. Learn much more: all from the point of view of those who actually lived it, and whose tireless efforts have expanded our knowledge of the inner solar system.

496 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2016

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About the author

Jay Gallentine

4 books7 followers
Historian Jay Gallentine has a reputation for stripping away technobabble to focus on the human stories of space exploration. His casual and irreverent writing style renders a topic accessible and enjoyable, while retaining accuracy worthy of a reference tome.

Jay’s first book, "Ambassadors from Earth," detailing the turbulent early days of solar system exploration, received the 2009 Eugene M. Emme Award for Astronautical Literature.

Jay's second book is "Infinity Beckoned." In the same lighthearted and non-technical fashion, readers will learn brand-new stories about such topics as looking for life on Mars with the 1976 Viking landers, and the top-secret town in Crimea used to control Soviet moon rovers.

Jay's third book, "Born to Explore," examines the life of JPL's John Casani in context with the problem-plagued Galileo mission to Jupiter.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Scott Kardel.
387 reviews20 followers
February 26, 2016
I really enjoyed Jay Gallentine's new book Infinity Beckoned. It is an engaging look at the people behind the search for life on the Viking missions to Mars, the unsung Soviet Lunokhod lunar rover drivers, the Venera mission to Venus and more. A great read!
Profile Image for Alexander Dzhuly.
1 review1 follower
June 16, 2016
Infinity Beckoned is a history of the robotic exploration of the solar system that focuses on the men and women that made it happen.

Jay Gallentine clearly put an amazing amount of effort into digging up the inside information and personal stories of what was an amazing time in history of exploration. Tales of the Soviet Lunokhod lunar rover drivers, the Viking missions' search for life and the Soviet Venera missions to Venus left the biggest impressions, but the book is a wonderful history of robotic exploration.

This is the second book in this series. Jay Gallentine's previous book Ambassadors From Earth looked at missions such as Sputnik, Explorer and the Voyager probes to the outer solar system, and Infinity Beckoned was even better.
Profile Image for Shane Phillips.
376 reviews22 followers
May 15, 2019
This book is a hot mess. It started with 1.5 hours (audiobook) on "detecting life" experiments on earth then jumped to Russian Luna 15 and Apollo 11 moon landing then back for 3 hours of Russian moon background. Skipping between US and Russian and different programs was very confusing. We spent over 2 hourson Luna 16 moon rover from its design/creation and the main engineers life from 1917 to 1960's (blah blah blah. don't give a shit if they designer liked soccer and enjoyed fish). The want back from 1970-71 Luna 16 back to Apollo (not sure why) then jumped to Vera Venus missing the forward to Voyager then backward to Mars Viking. I quit 50% through. that's 8 hours. So I felt I gave it a good shot.
Profile Image for Paul.
1,284 reviews29 followers
March 5, 2018
I've never read anything of substance about the Russian side of the story so it was extremely interesting to me. Impressed by how the author tracked down so many people responsible. I really disliked the informal tone the book is written in. It's OK to quote interviewees in natural language but adding it to normal prose is forced and plain annoying.
Profile Image for Ronald.
144 reviews1 follower
May 5, 2021
Excellent storytelling, if a bit long and short of technical material. Was looking more for a technical case study. Nice to have included the soviet perspective as well.
Profile Image for Shrike58.
1,455 reviews24 followers
April 27, 2024
I'm not quite sure what I make of this book, which tries to cover a very technical topic in a very colloquial and pop writing style; which I wound up finding a little annoying. Still, in examining the unmanned American & Russian planetary missions of the time, the overarching theme might be that for all the effort the results remain rather ambiguous, and that there has not been enough follow-up research. To be blunt, the Viking Mars landers were probably over-ambitious and engineered to ask the wrong questions, whereas the Soviet efforts were undercut by a lagging electronics & computer base on one hand, and the irrationalities of the Soviet system on the other; bureaucratic friction is the soul of this story. There is no doubt though that the author has put forth a great deal of journalistic effort into this book, and he deserves respect on that basis.

Actual rating: 3.5.

Originally written: March 4, 2017.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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