The Ultimate Engineer
The Remarkable Life of NASA's Visionary Leader George M. Low
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- 29,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
From the late 1950s to 1976, the U.S. human spaceflight program advanced as it did largely due to the extraordinary efforts of Austrian immigrant George M. Low. Described as the “ultimate engineer” during his career at NASA, Low was a visionary architect and leader from the agency’s inception in 1958 to his retirement in 1976. As chief of manned spaceflight at NASA, Low was instrumental in the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs.
At the end of his NASA career, Low was one of the leading figures in the development of the Space Shuttle in the early 1970s, and he was instrumental in NASA’s transition into a post-Apollo world. Chronicling Low’s escape from Nazi-occupied Austria to his helping land a man on the moon, The Ultimate Engineer sheds new light on one of the most fascinating and complex personalities of the golden age of U.S. human space travel.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Jurek (Marketing the Moon, coauthor), an Air & Space magazine contributor, gives a now obscure, yet vital, player in America's space program his due in this solid biography. George M. Low (1926 1984), who immigrated to the U.S. from Austria in 1940, joined NASA precursor NACA (the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics) in 1949 as an aeronautical research scientist, and transferred to NASA upon its formation nine years later. Jurek makes extensive use of Low's own writings, as well as interviews with his friends and family, to recount a meteoric career, which would see him head the Gemini and Apollo programs, shepherding the latter toward a successful lunar landing after the traumatic Apollo 1 fire. While according the most attention to Low's professional achievements which also included being named deputy NASA administrator in December 1969 Jurek takes care to humanize his subject, with appealing descriptions of Low's devotion to his wife and to their five children. Even under the immense pressure of the Apollo program, Low tried, he told reporters, "to make it a rule not to work on Sundays." The result of Jurek's extensive research and careful use of detail is a comprehensive portrait of a figure vastly greater in significance than in name recognition. Correction: An earlier version of this review referred to George M. Low's wife by an incorrect name.