When the Apollo astronauts walked on the Moon in 1969, many people imagined Mars would be next. However, NASA’s Viking 1, which landed in 1976, was just a robot, and the much-anticipated crewed mission failed to materialize, defeated by a combination of technological and political challenges. Four decades after Viking and almost half a century after Apollo, technology has improved beyond recognition—as has politics. As private ventures like SpaceX seize center stage from NASA, Mars has undergone a seismic shift—it’s become the prime destination for future human expansion and colonization. But what’s it really like on Mars, and why should anyone want to go there? How do you get there, and what are the risks? Astrophysicist and science writer Andrew May answers these questions and more, as he traces the history of our fascination with the Red Planet.
Discovering Mars
William Sheehan, Jim Bell
audiobookThe Big Book of Mars
Marc Hartzman
audiobookLife on Mars : What to Know Before We Go
David A. Weintraub
audiobookThe Case for Mars
Robert Zubrin
audiobookHow We'll Live on Mars
Stephen Petranek
audiobookbookMars is My Destination
Frank Belknap Long
bookSelf-Discipline Training
Joshua Strachan
bookThink Faster, Talk Smarter : How to Speak Successfully When You're Put on the Spot
Matt Abrahams
audiobookGetting to Yes : How to Negotiate Agreement Without Giving In
Roger Fisher, William Ury
audiobookDaisy Jones & The Six
Taylor Jenkins Reid
audiobookbookAtlas of AI
Kate Crawford
audiobookHow To Talk To Anyone
John S. Lawson
book