Step to the Stars
by Lester del Ray (1954) was the first "adult" book I ever read. I
read it in the third grade. I chose it because I was fascinated with the United
States space program and with space in general and this relatively short novel about
the building of the first space station must have interested me. The plot involves
a U.S. company working under federal contract to build the first space station in
the early 1950s. In some ways, the novel is prescient. The principles of
orbital mechanics that allow a space station to be placed in orbit were already
known. There was already discussion about putting a space station in orbit,
although it didn't take place for the next 20 years if you count Skylab or 30
years if you count the International Space Station.
In the novel, various obstacles along the way interfere with
the building of the space station. A group of hostile nations called the Combine
have placed spies among the workers building the station. They explode bombs
and commit other forms of sabotage. The Combine itself is attempting to develop
an atomic powered rocket that will allow its own space station to be built and
placed in orbit. (When the first launch of the atomic rocket ends in an
explosion, the Americans set out to rescue the crew members, who by some
miraculous means have survived).
The building of the space station itself causes an
international crisis. The military potential of the space station is much
discussed in the novel, which expresses mixed views about whether using it for
military rather than scientific purposes is a good idea. Nearly 70 years have
passed since Step to the Stars was
written, and in that time many significant technical, scientific, and social
advances have occurred. Solar panels power today's space station, while a
mirror that focuses the sun's rays on a steam generator powers the one in del Ray's
novel. The novel's attitude towards women is old-fashioned, although the
presence of a few women on the space station is significant. One of them, Nora,
who enters the novel as a nurse, ends up with considerable responsibility and
is promoted to pilot status by the end of the novel. The manager of the team building
the space station even says that, with a few caveats, women can perform as well
in space as men. No people of color, at least no African-Americans, work on the
space station. There is one Mexican among the teambuilding the space station.
He is repeatedly referred to as "the little man," and he is
occasionally described with equivocal language. Yet the main character in the
novel thinks highly of him and gives him significant responsibility.
What seems most old-fashioned and wrong about Step to the Stars is the ease with which
the space station is built. A fleet of three or four rockets takes off on a
daily basis from a spaceport on Johnston Island to ferry equipment and people to
the space station. Building this station takes a year's time. At the end of the
novel, we’re told that the U. S. government is planning to send a rocket with
people aboard to the moon "next year." We know now from our
experience with the last 60 years that putting people into space, building space
stations, going to the moon, planning to go Mars, is difficult, complex,
fraught with difficulty, arduous, and time-consuming. Most of all space travel
involves immense amounts of money.
I returned to this novel for reasons of nostalgia and because
I wanted to see how I would view it now, from my adult perspective. It was
pretty much as I remembered it. It's not the kind of novel I would choose to
read today, but it was the kind of book I needed to get me started as a serious
reader in the third grade. I read science fiction almost exclusively for the
next five or six years of my life, and then moved to other literature.
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