- Published: 14 May 2024
- ISBN: 9780241994276
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 576
Challenger
A True Story of Heroism and Disaster on the Edge of Space
- Published: 14 May 2024
- ISBN: 9780241994276
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 576
There is no let-up in the tension Adam Higginbotham skilfully creates as he uncovers the many missed opportunities to avert the disastrous launch of the Space Shuttle Challenger. His remarkable book is testimony to the truth that although technology will sometimes let us down, in the end it is human weakness that creates tragedy and human strength that creates heroism. And like a Greek tragedy you know how it will end, but you cannot stop reading. A truly gripping book
David Omand, author of How Spies Think and How to Survive a Crisis
Enthralling, dramatic and utterly comprehensive. Over a twenty-year history that moves at the pace of a thriller, Adam Higginbotham charts the wide-eyed enthusiasm and optimism of a renewed US space program where anything was possible, but which – over time – was fatally eroded by bureaucratic infighting, political pressure and systemic underfunding. In Higginbotham’s masterly hands, we see the heights and disasters made possible by human ingenuity
Cara McGoogan, author of The Poison Line
A masterly example of how meticulous research and adherence to factual detail can build a narrative of almost unbearable suspense. At the same time, with the outcome known from the beginning, the story has the implacable power of tragic inevitability
Geoff Dyer
Gripping and memorable, a definitive account of an American tragedy
Ed Caesar
A deeply reported, highly compelling, and richly detailed story of how our highest aspirations can turn into tragedy
Paul Caruana Galizia, author of A Death in Malta
Adam Higginbotham is one of the most brilliant reporters of our generation. He has given us another masterpiece in Challenger. Gripping, forensic and unforgettable, it will undoubtedly be one of the best books of the year
Will Storr, author of The Science of Storytelling
Adam Higginbotham has written a gripping, eye-opening, moving, and finely detailed history of not just an infamous disaster but a whole generation of the Space Age. Picking up where Tom Wolfe left off, this book stands as the fascinating sequel to The Right Stuff, mixing together science, politics, and space exploration and providing a unique window into the lives of those Americans who have reached for the stars. Even though you know how the story ends, you'll eagerly turn the beautifully written pages wondering what comes next. Challenger is one of the generation's best non-fiction writers working at the top of his game
Garrett Graff, author of The Only Plane in the Sky and Watergate
Challenger is a masterpiece. The depth and detail in Higginbotham’s research is breathtaking, the picture he paints is textured and vivid but his prose reads like a thriller . . . this book brings together the many threads of the disaster to reveal a modern parable about America at a turning point in history: the gap between the ambitions of its leaders and the reality of what it was. As well as this, it is a story is about human beings: their frailties and dreams, their heroism and weakness and their frustration and suffering as cogs in a machine gone wrong
Peter Apps, author of the Orwell Prize-winning Show Me the Bodies: How We Let Grenfell Happen
In a masterful tapestry of science, heroism, and heartbreak, Challenger unfolds the profound narrative of a pivotal moment that reshaped our view of the stars and ourselves. Adam Higginbotham captures the spirit of an era, the weight of ambition, and the indomitable courage of those who dared to reach for the heavens, only to be ensnared by tragedy. A gripping, poignant chronicle that reveals the Challenger disaster in a light never seen before
Eliot Higgins, author of We Are Bellingcat
Deep research, gripping writing and a chilling story. This is an incredible book
Tim Harford, author of How To Make The World Add Up
In Higginbotham’s deft hands, the human element — sometimes heroic, sometimes cloaked in doublespeak and bluster — shines through the many technical aspects of this story, a constant reminder that every decision was made by people weighing risks versus expediency, their minds distorted by power, money, politics and yes-men. It’s a universal story that transcends time, from Napoleon’s decision to attack Russia to the recent Boeing 737 Max debacle
Rachel Slade, New York Times
Dramatic . . . The book delivers a compelling, comprehensive history of the disaster that exposed, as Higginbotham writes, how "the nation's smartest minds had unwittingly sent seven men and women to their deaths"
Andrew Demillo, Independent
No tragedy is more indelible than the space shuttle Challenger disaster . . . a superb diagnosis of one of NASA’s darkest moments . . . the narrative comes to life in a fresh telling fueled by meticulous detail and exacting prose. While familiar, the story is rendered dreamlike so that readers can’t help but hope, as it unfolds page by page, that somehow the outcome this time will be different
Christian Davenport, Washington Post
No book that I’ve reviewed in the past ten years has disturbed me quite like this one. I cried for McAuliffe and her fellow crew members, whose innocent ideals of space exploration were so cruelly exploited. Higginbotham tells this tragic story with superb dramatic instinct — we know what’s going to happen, but feel the suspense nonetheless
Gerard DeGroot, The Times
Devastating and riveting in equal measures
Boris Starling, Daily Telegraph
Artfully told . . . refreshingly even-handed . . . it’s the human element that makes it
Francisco Garcia
Superb . . . authoritative and immediate – scrupulous history which has the ripping compulsion of the best reporting
Alex Diggins, Daily Telegraph
Enthralling . . . Adam Higginbotham's excellent book is a sobering warning of the dangers of what he calls "mankind's overconfidence in his own ingenuity"
Andrew Crumey, Literary Review
Challenger is a remarkable book. It manages to be a whodunit that stretches hundreds of pages, a heart-pounding thriller even though readers already know the ending . . . Our faith in the systems that run our world is really faith in our fellow man—a chilling reality to remember
Emma Sarappo, Atlantic
Both riveting and illuminating
Roger D. Launius, Times Literary Supplement
Challenger will take you to the stars and break your heart at the same time. History may not be the actions of a few ‘Great Men’ but, as Adam Higginbotham relates in gripping detail, it can certainly be shaped by the terrible decisions of a few individuals. Everyone should read this book
Amanda Foreman, author of A World on Fire
A fascinating and superbly researched account of the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger soon after take off. A masterly blend of human drama, science and political infighting
Observer
Higginbotham blends meticulous research with accessible prose, making for a profoundly informative book that shows rather than tells . . . Challenger will undoubtedly draw in a range of readers with diverse interests
Amy Shira Teitel, BBC History Magazine.
Definitive . . . a gripping an nuanced story of serial failure . . . we know how this awful story ends: but Higginbotham builds suspense in contrasting knowledge with ignorance; in showing how men and women tried to do their best for the grand dream of space flight and were too often thwarted
Erica Wagner, New Statesman
There was the world before the Challenger disaster, and the world after . . . Higginbotham’s superb narrative history relates the events around that cold January morning in 1986, and the lives, from stifled whistleblowers to doomed astronauts, drawn into their orbit
The 75 hottest books of 2024, Daily Telegraph