How to Make a Spaceship

Non-fiction book by Julian Guthrie From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

How to Make a Spaceship

How to Make a Spaceship: A Band of Renegades, an Epic Race, and the Birth of Private Spaceflight is a 2016 non-fiction book by journalist Julian Guthrie about the origins of the X Prize Foundation and Peter Diamandis, the first X Prize, the Ansari X Prize and Anousheh Ansari, the entrants into that suborbital spaceflight competition, and the winning team, Mojave Aerospace Ventures of Vulcan Inc., Paul G. Allen, Scaled Composites, Burt Rutan, and their platform of Tier One of SpaceShipOne and WhiteKnightOne.[1][2][3]

Quick Facts Author, Audio read by ...
How to Make a Spaceship
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AuthorJulian Guthrie
Audio read byRob Shapiro
Working titleBeyond
LanguageEnglish
SubjectSpaceflight
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherPenguin Books, Random House
Publication date
September 2016
Publication placeUnited States
Media type
  • Hardcover
  • Softcover trade paperback
  • CD audiobook
  • Digital-file audiobook
  • Digital-file e-book
Pages448
ISBN978-1101980491
OCLC1011116852
WebsiteHow to Make a Spaceship
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Synopsis

The book is an overview of what led to the creation of the X Prize, and the running of that first X Prize. Profiles of the major players in the X Prize initiative are included in the book. It chronologically starts with the influences that weighed upon Peter Diamandis, and his progression into the space industry. It also covers the process to get funding, rejections, and the arrival of the Ansaris, becoming title sponsors. The book surveys several of the teams that entered into the competition to win the Ansari X Prize. The team that is focused on most is that which won the X Prize in 2004, the one headed by Paul Allen and Burt Rutan, of SpaceShipOne. The book ends with an epilogue about Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic acquiring the SpaceShipOne technology, and the spaceplane itself ending up in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. The book includes a preface by Richard Branson and an afterword by Stephen Hawking.[4][3][5][6][7][8]

Publication

The book was originally entitled Beyond: Peter Diamandis and the Adventure of Space, when it was sold preemptively to Penguin Books in 2014.[9] How to Make a Spaceship was released in September 2016, in trade paperback, hardcover, audio book and e-book formats.[1] The book appeared on several "Best Of" book lists and became a New York Times bestseller.[10] Several parties expressed interest in obtaining the filming rights to the book.[11]

Reception

Gregg Easterbrook's review in The Wall Street Journal said the book "offers a rousing anthem to the urge to explore".[12]

Awards and honors

See also

References

Further reading

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