This year is the 60th anniversary of the Vostok and Mercury Programs (the Soviet and American race to be the first to launch a man into space).
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Beyond," by Stephen Walker, was released this year. Walker does an impressive job interviewing the few living witnesses to these events and piecing them together with official and unofficial Soviet documents to tell the remarkable story of Yuri Gargarin's selection, training, launch, and fame as the first man to be launched into space on a Vostok capsule mounted on the top of an R7 ICBM rocket.
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The Right Stuff," by Tom Wolfe, was released in 1979 (and made into a movie in 1983 and series in 2000). Wolfe had the benefit of being able to interview many of the original characters and is a very entertaining storyteller (as if this story needs a storyteller). Wolfe tells of the selection and celebrity of the Mercury Seven and their race to catch up with the Soviets (along with identifying Chuck Yeager as the test pilot who created the Right Stuff myth).
Amazing to me that the Soviets were so far ahead in technology (at least rocket power) in 1961, yet completely out of the running by 1969.
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