cover image THEY ALL LAUGHED AT CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS: An Incurable Dreamer Builds the First Civilian Spaceship

THEY ALL LAUGHED AT CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS: An Incurable Dreamer Builds the First Civilian Spaceship

Elizabeth Weil, . . Bantam, $24.95 (240pp) ISBN 978-0-553-10886-6

Weil, a magazine writer, chronicles the efforts of one baby boomer determined to create a working space ship. Gary Hudson was fascinated with space exploration from his childhood, and by the time he approached his 50th birthday, he had nearly 30 years in the rocket-ship business. An eccentric fellow, Hudson attracted a small group of employees and investors equally as fanatic. Weil shadows Hudson for nearly two years as he attempts to raise money to build and complete the Roton, a single state–to–orbit reusable rocket. She attends conventions, speeches, employee barbecues, befriends Hudson's sickly wife and listens endlessly to Hudson's dreams. The book's anecdotes are somewhat reminiscent of stories about the development of computer companies or Internet startups—the camaraderie, the hard work and a certain naïveté about the business world. Weil's writing is simple and occasionally elegant, but the book would have been stronger had she revealed more passion for the subject: she remains an interested but impartial observer. The notion of traveling into space is wildly appealing, but this book never fully engages the reader: unfortunately, Hudson isn't a terribly likable guy and his chances of succeeding seem so slim. (Oct.)