I found a copy of “High Calling” on amazon.com while researching my current book, “Bringing Columbia Home.” The author is Evelyn Husband, wife of astronaut Rick Husband, the commander of Columbia’s final mission. Rick perished with his crew on February 1, 2003 when Columbia disintegrated 200,000 feet above Dallas.
Donna Vanliere is listed as the co-author of the book, which means that she likely ghost-wrote the book. She is an award-winning author who specializes in Christmas books. Her style fits nicely with the moods experienced by Mrs. Husband throughout her remarkable journey.
The book traces the relationship between Rick and Evelyn Husband going back to their first meeting in Amarillo High School and continuing through their 20-year marriage.
I’ve heard many wonderful things about Rick Husband from the astronauts and NASA engineers and technicians who worked with him. All described him as fun-loving, God-fearing, wise, energetic, and enthusiastic - the kind of man any astronaut would want as the commander of their mission.
With this book, Evelyn Husband shows us the sides of Rick the spouse, the active father, the singer with the amazing voice. We see that he was a humble man, comfortable with who he was, always seeking to put other people in the limelight so they could shine.
Most striking to me is that this book spends so much time discussing the events leading up to and during Columbia’s final mission. Evelyn even shares the emails that she and her children exchanged with Rick while Columbia was in orbit during the last two weeks of January. We see that he was having the time of his life, absolutely exultant in the work that he was doing and the experiences of being in space, and yet eager to see his family on his return.
She shares the incredible emptiness of waiting in vain for Columbia to appear in the skies over Florida, and the shock and horror of realizing that he was never coming home again. I find it incredible that this book was written in 2003, less than one year after the accident, and that Mrs. Husband could talk about such painful memories.
I talked to people that met Evelyn during the search for Columbia’s crew’s remains and the debris from the ship. She was “of good courage,” to use a quote from Joshua that Rick recited to his crew before their launch on January 16, 2003. She was gracious, appreciative, and strong. Her good courage shines through in her book.
While she’s a deeply religious person, as was her husband, she does not pull punches when she talks about how her faith was tested by the Rick’s death. “I have lost all sense of politeness with God,” she writes on page 232. “I have cried and wept and yelled at him, but I know He’s big enough to handle it.”
I learned a lot about courage and faith in the face of loss by reading this book. I’m glad to have it on my shelf.