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"Blending a fascinating personal history with dramatic historical events, this book brings long-overdue attention to a brilliant woman whose work proved essential for America's early space program. This is the extraordinary true story of America's first female rocket scientist. Told by her son, it describes Mary Sherman Morgan's crucial contribution to launching America's first satellite and the author's labyrinthine journey to uncover his mother's lost legacy--one buried deep under a lifetime of secrets political, technological, and personal. In 1938, a young German rocket enthusiast named Wernher von Braun had dreams of building a rocket that could fly him to the moon. In Ray, North Dakota, a young farm girl named Mary Sherman was attending high school. In an age when girls rarely dreamed of a career in science, Mary wanted to be a chemist. A decade later the dreams of these two disparate individuals would coalesce in ways neither could have imagined. World War II and the Cold War space race with the Russians changed the fates of both von Braun and Mary Sherman Morgan. When von Braun and other top engineers could not find a solution to the repeated failures that plagued the nascent US rocket program, North American Aviation, where Sherman Morgan then worked, was given the challenge. Recognizing her talent for chemistry, company management turned the assignment over to young Mary. In the end, America succeeded in launching rockets into space, but only because of the joint efforts of the brilliant farm girl from North Dakota and the famous German scientist. While von Braun went on to become a high-profile figure in NASA's manned space flight, Mary Sherman Morgan and her contributions fell into obscurity--until now."--… (more)
User reviews
Her son, George Morgan, grew up knowing very little about her life, and when he learned about what she'd accomplished, he felt she ought to be given more recognition from the world at large. Hence this book. Here, he lightly sketches his own difficult relationship with his mother and describes some of his researches into her life, as well as how he came to write first a play about her life and then this biography. He also provides fictionalized accounts of various moments in her life, and in the lives of Wernher von Braun and Sergei Korolev, the heads of the US and Soviet rocket programs at the time.
Mary Sherman Morgan's life is certainly a remarkable one, and I am always interested in anything to do with the early days of the space program, so I did find this worth reading, but I can't say I found it entirely satisfying. In the end, one never gets a very good sense of exactly who this woman really was (something that seemed to ultimately elude even her son). And I'm really not a big fan of this particular style of "non-fiction" writing, in which scenes are dramatized complete with dialog and thoughts in people's heads that the author could have no way of actually knowing about. You can never be sure how much of what you're reading is anything like the truth, and how much the author simply invented out of his own mind. And in this case, based on the author's note at the end, it seems like he invented a lot. So, in the end, I'm not at all sure how much more I know now than I did when I started.
Mary Sherman Morgan's story was fascinating. Born to poor, abusive parents
This book is both fascinating and frustrating. Mary was an intensely private person, averse to photographs, who didn't leave much evidence of her life behind, not even min the form of stories shared with her son, who authored this book. George shares his search for any sort of documentation of his mother's career, which turns out to be mostly non-existent. (The documentation, not the career.) Much of her story is pieced together by interviews with Mary's co-workers, who don't want her legacy forgotten after her passing.
The book also seems torn between aspirations of what it wants to be. After I read a few favorite ringing passages to my husband, he said, "That's very theatrical." And I laughed. Of course it was, I just hadn't put the word to it yet. George Morgan is a playwright, and this book grew from a play he wrote about his mother. And as much as George tries to establish his mother's place in the space race, it's also intensely personal, in places more a memoir of his search for information. But as a memoir, it also leaves questions strangely unanswered, like why his father can't or won't fill in more details of his mother's personal story.
Despite any of these shortcomings, this is still a compelling story, and one that needs to be shared.