Middle School
In the summer of
1975, twins Mark and Scott Kelly are in big trouble when they take apart
(a.k.a. destroy) their dad’s
calculator. As punishment, they are sent to their grandpa’s house, where
there’s no TV. Grandpa suggests they channel their energy into something
constructive.
With the help of
Jenny, nicknamed Egg, and a crew of can-do kids, they set out to build a
real-live rocket that will blast off and orbit the Earth.
Unlike
the ‘Moon Base Alpha’ series, an
actual astronaut wrote these books. Mark Kelly was a captain in the United
States Navy when he commanded the final mission of Space Shuttle Endeavour in May 2011 and is a veteran
of four space flights to the International Space Station.
When
I first found these books I thought it would be like ‘Phineas and Ferb’, two brothers and their friends building the
impossible. But these books are nothing like ‘Phineas and Ferb’. For one, these kids didn’t build the spaceship
in one day. The first book shows just how much hard work, cooperation and
brainpower go into making space travel possible.
These
books are for kids a lot smarter than me; the science, mathematics and physics
in this story kind of went over my head. Don’t feel bad if you don’t understand
everything said in this book. I didn’t really understand it and I’m 23 years
old, even the simplified terms I didn’t really get.
*****
Last summer, with the
help of their friends, Mark and Scott Kelly turn some spare parts into a real
rocket ship and sent Scott into orbit. This summer is looking dull in
comparison. Until they hear on the news that a Russian cosmonaut is trapped
inside the Salyut space station orbiting 220 miles above earth.
Complete with
spacesuits and snacks, the twins take off to rescue the Russian spacecraft.
This
story is almost like reading a history/science textbook, so many facts it made
my head spin.
A
big part of this story is about Russia and how it’s different from the United
States and how Russians ‘couldn’t be trusted’. I actually read another book on
this subject and might review it someday. Anyway, I really don’t understand why
some countries fight. I’d probably understand more if I watched the news but
that’s not going to happen. For half the book I didn’t understand why the
Russians would want to hurt the world then I read the word ‘Stalin’ and it
started to make sense. I had to keep reminding myself that this story takes
place in 1976. Then again, when it comes to how humans treat each other, it’s
the same story but a different year.
*****
Be
sure to check out the Glossary at the end of each book in an attempt to
understand the science and history in the stories.
I liked the Moon Base Alpha series but then I enjoy everything by Stuart Gibbs.
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