"On the 44th anniversary of the launch
of the first man-made satellite, Paul Dickson has written a wonderful
history of this landmark event: Sputnik: The Shock of the Century."
Newsday,
Jamie Talan
"Sputnik is a surprise. While
the subject matter suggests it is
basically for the scientifically minded, the book has an important message
for the layman. Furthermore, author Paul Dickson, although formerly
a reporter for Electronics magazine, writes in layman's language,
and the parallels between the Sputnik shock of more than 40 years ago
and the terrorists' shock of 2001 are astonishing. "Dickson's account
of all the events in the space raccoons both accurate and exciting.
As he puts it near the end of the book, Sputnik "forever altered
America's cultural and political landscape." That it did. Whether
it prepared America for the shock of terrorism is another question."
Richmond
Times-Dispatch, Robert A. Lincoln
"Most of this well-researched book
takes the reader down memory lane, but Dickson tells so much more than
any of us knew about it at the time. You can tell the author is a journalist.
And a good one. He moves the historic-scientific story along at a fast
clip, slipping in hundreds of details, sources and personal experiences
as he goes."
The
Daily Oklahoman, Reba Neighbors COLA's.
"Sputnik: The Shock of the Century,
a book suddenly made timely by the shock of this new century."
Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, John Marshall
"In these first months of responding
to the terrorism of Sept. 11,
books like this one are particularly valuable, helping us place the
present event in the context of history and to make decisions that future
historians will regard as necessary, courageous, and resulting in an
enduring positive impact on civilization."
The
Dallas Morning News, Fred Bortz
"Paul Dickson's fascinating Sputnik
...makes the space race come alive in layman's language, and he shows
how the shock of the Russians being first at something galvanized this
country in all sorts of far-reaching ways."
Booklist,
Bill Ott
"Paul Dickson skillfully puts the
story of Sputnik and its
aftermath into this new perspective in his informative and readable
book."
The Christian Science Monitor, Robert
C. Cowen
"AFTER that
day nothing can be the same again. With the US's
self-confidence shaken after years of prosperity, and the President
under fire for initial inactivity, it feels like a new Pearl Harbor.
The dormant special relationship between the US and Britain is reawakened.
An inward-looking nation becomes painfully aware of a hostile outside
world. Some call for an immediate military response. Others seek scapegoats.
But this isn't 11 September 2001; it's 4 October 1957.
"Unlike the
recent attack on America, no one died when Sputnik was launched. But
this superb book on the repercussions of the first artificial satellite
makes uncanny reading in the light of recent events. ... the best book
on the political shockwaves following Sputnik."
The
New Scientist
"Paul Dickson
recalls a succession of moods that will feel familiar, post?September
11: enormous complacency, then disbelief, then abiding apprehension.
Even though the 184 lb satellite killed no one, and even though the
Soviet Union clearly insisted its purpose was peaceful, its advent sent
many of the same shockwaves through western society that Osama bin Laden's
suicide planes did last month."
Financial
Times, Amity Shlaes
"Sprinkled with photos
and quotes, this book provides an easy,
compelling read."
Astronomy,
Carol Ryback
"Freelance writer Paul Dickson shows why Americans of the 1950''s
were so freaked out. Relying on government records declassified only
in the last half-decade, he has reconstructed not just the military
stakes of the launch but also the Cold War society it so rudely roiled,
giving a straightforward and snappy account of a crisis in American
politics, science and self-esteem."
New
York Observer, Christopher Caldwell
"The dust jacket of
Paul Dickson's delightful book about the launch of the first Earth satellite
shows a stunned, binocular?swaddled man gaping at the night sky. The
Soviet Sputnik was, as the book's subtitle says, "The Shock
of the Century," with an impact 44 years ago something like
that of Pearl Harbor. Sputnik shook American complacency and led to
great changes.
"Relying on newly
declassified Cold War documents and his storytelling skill, Dickson
entertainingly illuminates the post?Sputnik turmoil that led not just
to flights to the moon and planets but also to altering vast swaths
of American life, from education to computers to civil rights and feminism.
He captures perfectly the frantic, even zany, flavor of the times and
the dizzying social impact of the "Red Moon." Even the Internet,
Dickson says, owes its genesis to the panic over Sputnik."
The
Oregonian, Vince Kohler
"Although written before the recent
assaults on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Paul Dickson's Sputnik
is a good reminder that a sense of global vulnerability has been with
us for longer than we would like to think. Sputnik, after all, went
at the peak of the Cold War. Six weeks before, the Soviets had test?fired
the first intercontinental ballistic missile; three days after came
the report of their first H?bomb test. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev
proclaimed that his country would soon turn out nuclear missiles "like
sausages." "In an otherwise straightforward and sometimes
workmanlike book about America's rude entry into the Space Age, Dickson
has a story to tell about the initial moment in the race for space as
convoluted as any classic John Le Carre Cold War spy tale."
Tom
Engelhardt, News & Observer (Raleigh, NC)
"In
Sputnik: The Shock of the Century, Paul Dickson, a veteran journalistic
researcher fascinated with space and the Cold War, turns the clock back
to the seeming tranquility of the 1950s. "Like the recent terrorist
assaults on the East Coast, the Soviet Union's 1957 launching of Sputnik,
the first manmade satellite sounded a wake up call for the United States.
"'There is a world of difference
in the levels of violence, but tragically there are parallels,' Dickson
said recently when asked to size up the Sputnik launching compared with
the Sept. 11 terrorist assault and with the surprise attack on Pearl
Harbor. The threat posed by each of those events, he noted, forced America
to respond to its vulnerabilities in ways that changed -- or will alter
-- the country forever."
Houston
Chronicle, Mark Carreau
"Washington writer Paul Dickson
mined mountains of recently
declassified documents. He used old press accounts and new interviews.
From this mass of material, he's produced a riveting history of the
space race."
Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinal, Elaine Viets
"Sputnik should climb far
up the lists, and have a long ride."
The
Baltimore Sun, James H. Bready