Riding Rockets: The Outrageous Tales of a Space Shuttle Astronaut
Written by Mike Mullane
Narrated by Joel Richards
4/5
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About this audiobook
Mullane's tales of arrested development among military flyboys working with feminist pioneers and post-doc scientists are sometimes bawdy, often comical, and always entertaining. He vividly portrays every aspect of the astronaut experience, from telling a female technician which urine-collection condom size is a fit to hearing "Taps" played over a friend's grave. He is also brutally honest in his criticism of a NASA leadership whose bungling would precipitate the Challenger disaster-killing four members of his group. A hilarious, heartfelt story of life in all its fateful uncertainty, Riding Rockets will resonate long after the call of "Wheel stop."
Mike Mullane
Upon his graduation from West Point in 1967, Mike Mullane was commissioned in the USAF. He flew 134 combat missions in Vietnam. Selected in the first group of space shuttle astronauts, he completed three space missions. He lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico, with his wife, Donna, and enjoys the challenge of Colorado's fourteen-thousand-foot peaks -- six climbed, forty-seven to go. He is also an acclaimed motivational speaker. For more information visit www.MikeMullane.com.
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Reviews for Riding Rockets
135 ratings8 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is part autobiography and part rant against NASA management. I got 3/4 of the way through but just got bored. It's a shame, because it started off really interesting. As my husband pointed out, the author has a bit of a problem in that two of his three space flights were military, and so he can't talk about them. Instead he makes up the bulk of the book by detailing office politics and leadership failings. That just isn't very interesting to me.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5In Riding Rockets: The Outrageous Tales of a Space Shuttle Astronaut, NASA Space Shuttle Astronaut Richard Michael “Mike” Mullane (STA-41-D, STS-27, STS-36) recounts his experiences from childhood through his time in the Air Force and NASA. Mullane was part of the NASA class of 1978 – nicknamed TFNG for “Thirty-Five New Guys” (or a less polite name in private) – which also included Sally Ride, Guion Bluford, and Ellison Onizuka, the first American woman, African American, and Asian-American in space, respectively. Mullane’s memoir holds nothing back, with his military boys’ culture recalling elements of Tom Wolfe’s account in The Right Stuff. He explains how this caused conflicts with NASA’s first class of women astronauts as the agency while also critiquing the management of NASA in the 1980s, blaming the eventual Challenger disaster and other safety oversights on management’s complacency that filtered down through all echelons of the organization. In Mullane’s view, the hype surrounding the Shuttle led to shortcuts and complacency in the name of operational status, resulting in seats opening to “part-time” astronauts in the name of publicity (pg. 206). Mullane’s extensive experience informs his conclusions. Over the course of his three flights, Mullane logged 356 hours of spaceflight in addition to his years in the Air Force. Further, his close friendship with Judy Resnick shapes his anger regarding NASA’s complacency prior to the Challenger disaster. That said, he acknowledges how the lure of flight is enough to make it all worthwhile for the astronauts themselves, despite his criticism of upper management. Mullane’s Riding Rockets will appeal to spaceflight enthusiasts, in particular those looking to learn more about the early Shuttle program and the cultural changes at NASA that surrounded it.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book offers an interesting insight into the world of space travel aboard the Space Shuttle. I found the description of the Challenger disaster in 1986 especially chilling. I was under the impression that the shuttle (including passenger cockpit) exploded shortly after launch. The truth is that the shuttle broke apart, and the cockpit probably remained intact until its impact with the ocean.
Mike Mullane described the feeling of being inside this fortress of a cockpit trying to make it fly with no lift, no indicators, no communication, only utter silence as it reached its highest point then began falling to the ocean. The disaster is famous because of schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe. Here, however, I found out that another woman astronaut lost her life on this mission. Judith Resnick was on her second mission.
There are many personal anecdotes from Mike Mullane who does not hide the fact of misogynistic and pigheaded male tendencies he started out with in the Air Force.
A woman astronaut would have had extremely difficult among the males in those days before PC became obligatory. The book drags at times with descriptive prose but in all a very edifying read that gives an honest glimpse into the unflattering (and dangerous) aspects of space flights, in addition to the primitive workings of male brains. Mike Mullane did not shy away from the details you wondered about but never dared to ask, like the toilet habits of astronauts. In fact, he starts the first chapter already with TMI about preparing for his first proctosigmoidoscopy. Good book if you have the interest and the time.
Looking now at the risks taken by these people, who pitted themselves against the elemental laws of physics and gravity, while armed only with nascent technology that proved at times fatal, is nothing short of breathtaking. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5What it says on the tin—Mullane is a mostly unrepentant sexist who wants you to take his acknowledgement that his sexism is unwarranted as sufficient excuse for hearing him recite it in a way that makes clear that he's only distancing himself from it now because he knows potential readers will dislike it. Because I’m basically inured to this kind of thing, I could read the rest of the book, which does effectively convey his excitement at the opportunity to be an astronaut, his frustration with NASA politics and the decisions that led to the Challenger disaster, and his other adventures.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I had mixed feelings about this book.
On one hand it is really well written, flowed really well, didn't get bogged down in the techno babble that dooms so many other books on space and space exploration, and at times was funny and poignant. It gives a very good behind the scenes look at the Shuttle program, its management, and most importantly the personalities of the astronauts themselves. His recounting of the flights he participated in were particularly good, including exceptionally well written sections on the times he spent simply watching the Earth go by beneath him. Best of all it is a very easy read!
On the other hand, Mullane tries too hard to come off as the typically over-sexed, right wing, hot shot rocket jock everyone assumes test pilots are. It seems contrived. The constant stream of digs at N.O.W., Gloria Steinem, Ted Kennedy and "commies" grew kind of tiresome. And I am convinced he doesn't actually know what the term "political correctness" means. He seems to think every time someone pushed back on some sexist and/or inappropriate thing he said or did they were being "politically correct." In actuality they were just pointing out he was being a jerk.
He was also unnecessarily critical of non-astronauts who either flew the shuttle or had some other role astronauts with a military background disapproved of. In what seems like a requirement for test pilots he apparently believed the Shuttle Program was there exclusively so he could fulfill his dream of getting into space. Any accommodation made to non-astronauts that delayed that goal was viewed with disdain.
His criticisms of John Glenn and Christa McAuliffe were notably off base...referring to their role in the shuttle program as immoral. He seems not to have a grasp of the larger purpose for manned space exploration, nor the fact that its funding is dependent on the support of the American people.
In the epilogue he included a moving tribute to the professional astronauts who were killed in the Challenger disaster; omitting part timers Christa McAuliffe and Greg Jarvis from his tribute. An unnecessary and petty omission in my opinion; one that ignores the inspiration McAuliffe has been to younger generations.
These criticisms aside however, I really did enjoy this book. The folks that decide to risk their lives doing this work will always get slack from me. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Entertaining, funny, informative - I enjoyed this immensely.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a very funny and really interesting look at what it was like to be a NASA space shuttle astronaut. Told by a man who admittedly suffers from "arrested development" and who happens to be in the first group to include females (Sally Ride was in this group), Mike Mullane recounts his experience with honesty, humor, and hubris (mixed with a bit of humility, too), giving us a behind the scenes look at this glamorous yet dangerous job.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Mullane is perhaps not the most famous astronaut ever, but his honest account of life and his willingness to put it on the line to ride NASA's rockets is possibly the best account you will ever read of what life was like for an 'ordinary' astronaut, if such a word could ever be applied to such a group of extraordinary people. Mullane flew in three space shuttle missions, both before and after the Challenger disaster. His pen portraits of his crews and colleagues, of his family and of the deeply dysfunctional NASA management are both engaging and disturbing (in the last instance). Mullane in his younger incarnations doesn't come out of it all with entirely shining colors, but it is part of his character - and ultimately the power of this book - to tell the story warts and all. The trasformation of Mullane is easily the best part of this story, and although he never quite pins it down, you realize that the real heroes of this story are Mullane's family and his flight colleague, Judith Resnik, and justly so. A surprising story that is worth absorbing. Highly recommended.