I had high expectations of this book. It had so many of the elements I like : a daring heist - science- outer space....It came with impeccable credentials, in the shape of a highly respected author (Ben Mezrich). And yet, I can't give this book more than 2 stars. And that is simply because I feel it violates one of the most central dogmas of the genre : get multiple perspectives. The story of Thad Roberts, a gifted NASA intern, who decided to steal some precious moon rocks from a NASA lab in order to sell them and impress his new girlfriend, is just that : the story of Thad. I understand that he collaborated copiously with the author - but he seems to have been one of the few people who did. Apart from some quick comments from people who met Thad along the way, there is very little in the book that didn't seem to come from Thad himself. His two accomplices refused to be interviewed for the book, and NASA personnel didn't seem too eager to be quoted either. So we are left with a very one-sided narrative. We hear all about Thad's Sturm und Drang - he even looks like a romantic hero - , about how we was kicked out by his rigid Mormon parents, how he pursued three major simultaneously at college, how he became a star in the NASA coop program - but when you close the back cover of the book, you realize that you are vaguely dissatisfied. Too many questions remain unanswered, such as : how could someone who was repeatedly described as "brilliant" be so stupid as to ask a stoner acquaintance how to flog moon rocks on the internet? And what were his two female accomplices thinking when they wheeled that safe containing the moon rocks out of the lab - that people would think this was an endearing student prank?
So, overall a disappointing book. I am sure it will be turned into a movie that could very well be a good one. Good-looking young geeks tiptoeing through sterile-looking lab corridors, then wild sex on a bed filled with moon rocks... all of this is very suitable for the silver screen, but as a written story it leaves much to be desired.
At the end of the book, the person who left the biggest impression on me was not charming, untrustworthy Thad but his victim, Everett Gibson. This respected NASA scientist, an expert on rocks from the moon, Mars and beyond, planted the seed for the theft in Thad's mind by a simple act of kindness and scientific mentorship : he showed Thad and his visiting wife some moon rocks from the safe in his lab. It was this very safe that was stolen. And it turned out that the safe contained not just moon rocks, but valuable scientific notebooks as well. All my sympathy went out to Dr. Gibson - I had none left for Thad or his accomplices. At the end of the book, we hear that Dr. Gibson showed his appreciation to the Belgian rock collector who alerted the FBI to the illegal merchandise being offered on the internet, by going to Antwerp and delivering a lecture on space rocks, and by arranging for an asteroid to be named after said Belgian rock collector. That's class! I am happy to hear that in this sad story at least one person knew how to behave with grace and dignity.