Difference between revisions of "February 26, 2009"

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<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
 
<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
<em>This LPOD originally appeared [http://www.lpod.org/archive/archive/2004/01/LPOD-2004-01-21.htm Jan 21, 2005]</em><br />
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<em>This LPOD originally appeared [[January_21,_2004|Jan 21, 2005]]</em><br />
 
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<strong>Related Links</strong><br />
 
<strong>Related Links</strong><br />
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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[February 27, 2009|Not Officially Birt R]] </p>
 
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[February 27, 2009|Not Officially Birt R]] </p>
 
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Latest revision as of 21:31, 22 March 2015

Sci-Fi Moon

LPOD-Feb26-09.jpg

Many scientists and engineers who worked on the Apollo project in the 1960s reported being inspired by science fiction stories that they read as teenagers. This wonderful cover for a 1928 paperback (found a year or so ago on Ebay - don't know who the buyer or seller were!) is the kind of space art (and text) that enchanted me some decades later. The cover offers the enticement of a person (in a Spiderman-tight space suit) amidst the craters and crags of the Moon. The back cover is a simple, but relatively accurate, map of the Moon with actual lunar names correctly placed. Are young people stimulated by today's science fiction - or have our science accomplishments eliminated such imaginative dreaming?

Chuck Wood
This LPOD originally appeared Jan 21, 2005

Related Links
The Moon in Science Fiction

Yesterday's LPOD: It's Only a Paper Crater

Tomorrow's LPOD: Not Officially Birt R



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