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10 pages, Audiobook
First published April 3, 2018
“Frank, do you want to go to the Moon?”————
— Deke Slayton (Director of Flight Crew Operations at NASA)
“Telegrams for the astronauts poured in by the thousands. One, however, stood out from the rest. It came not from a world leader or celebrity or other luminary, but from an anonymous stranger.
It had traveled over whites-only lunch counters in the South, through jungles in Vietnam where young men fell, over the coffins of two of America’s great civil rights leaders. It had blown across the streets bloodied by protesters and police, past a segregationist presidential campaign, into radios playing songs of alienation and revolt. It had made its way through ten million American souls who didn’t have enough to eat, alongside generations that no longer trusted each other, into a White House where a no-longer-loved president slept.
It read:
THANKS. YOU SAVED 1968.”

“Yes, Deke. Let’s go to the Moon.”
— Frank Borman (Commander of Apollo 8 mission)





“Less than a month remained in Johnson’s presidency. Five years earlier, he’d taken over from his slain predecessor, a president who’d made an impossible promise: to land a man on the Moon by the end of the decade. Johnson might have been forgiven for backing off Kennedy’s commitment. Instead he charged forward.”
“And there was Earth, a kaleidoscope of color turning in a black sky. Swirling cotton-white clouds revealed brilliant blue oceans beneath their breaks, while brown and green stretches of forest and jungle covered entire countries. Thin bands of blue followed the curvature of Earth, an incandescent skin of atmosphere come alive in a sea of darkness.”
“Earthrise was the most beautiful sight Borman had ever seen, the only color visible in all of the cosmos. The planet just hung there, a jewel on black velvet, and it struck him that everything he loved—Susan, the boys, his parents, his friends, his country—was on that tiny sphere, a brilliant blue and white interruption in a never-ending darkness, the only place he or anyone else had to call home.”
As he sat on a beach in the Caribbean, a quiet engineer named George Low ran his fingers through the sand and wondered whether he should risk everything to win the Space Race and help save the world.