Rowland White is the author of three critically acclaimed works of aviation history: Vulcan 607, Phoenix Squadron, and Storm Front. All three have been Sunday Times top ten bestsellers. His most recent novel is Into the Black.
This account of America's greatest and, in hindsight, most dangerous manned spaceflight is a fantastic read. After I started it, I read it straight through. For more than spaceflight geeks, this is the story of an astonishing adventure that, despite the outward confidence of NASA, could have and perhaps should have gone horribly wrong. --Homer Hickam, author Rocket Boys/October Sky An unforgettable book, one destined to become a classic in the emerging field of space history. Moving effortlessly from planning meetings in obscure offices within NASA, the Pentagon, and industry to the unforgiving environment of high-risk flight test and flight into space, this book traces a remarkable journey and, along the way, introduces his readers to a courageous group of far-seeing engineers and astronauts whose bold vision and tenacious work gave humanity its first reusable space transportation system. --Dr. Richard P. Hallion, Senior Adviser for Air and Space Issues at the Pentagon, author of On the Frontier This remarkable book describes the final (and unpublished) chapter in the 'Race to the Moon'! Between 1961 and 1963, four groups of astronauts were selected by the USA -- three groups were comprised of those pilots who were assigned to NASA and were highly publicized as men who explored the Moon. The fourth group disappeared into the black world of the CIA, the NRO, and the Top Secret Air Force Manned Orbiting Laboratory. This is the exciting first-told story of these exceptional pilots who only became known publicly during the development and first flights of the Space Shuttle - flights into the real Black of Space. --Dave Scott, Commander, Apollo 15 Into the Black isn't just spectacularly researched, it's told like a thriller, unfolding the edge-of-death tale of the Space Shuttle Columbia's maiden voyage in riveting fashion. Rowland White performs a rare feat here, stitching together comprehensive research--countless interviews, declassified files, flight documents--into a tale of courage and daring as streamlined and elegant as the aircraft herself. Buckle in and hold on tight--this thing's got jet propulsion. --Gregg Hurwitz, author of Orphan X Brilliantly revealed, Into the Black is the finely tuned true story of the first flight of the Space Shuttle Columbia. Rowland White has magnificently laid bare the unknown dangers and unseen hazards of that first mission. He has also given us an amazing insight into a world of science and engineering, the victories and defeats, for the first time. It's the perfect tale that educates as it entertains. Once read, not forgotten. --Clive Cussler Into the Black told me stuff I never knew before - and I worked at NASA for 30 years. --Michael Foale, former Astronaut and International Space Station Commander An extraordinary, carefully researched, tale of the evolution of America's space program. White has unearthed a treasure trove of formerly highly classified facts and combined them with an insightful look at the people who developed and flew America's early human spacecraft and the first Space Shuttle flight. --Hugh Harris, former Director of Public Affairs for NASA's Kennedy Space Center and Voice of Space Shuttle Launch Control for STS-1 Centuries from now the space shuttle program will be regarded as mankind's first mighty leap into space, not in a rowboat, but in a truly useful spaceship. White tells it as the great, magnificent adventure it was. A superb book. --Stephen Coonts Rowland White's account of Columbia's inaugural flight in 1981, and all the preparations that led up to it, could not be a more timely reminder of what it takes to design, launch and fly a complex manned space vehicle. White's research is thorough, his writing style is superb, and he has a gripping and fresh story to tell. This is a genuine 'must-have' book for anyone fascinated by the sharp end of space flight. ' --Piers Bizony, author of Starman, The Space Shuttle, and The Making of Stanley Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey' An absolutely terrific look into the birth of the Space Shuttle! Into the Black expertly captures, as never before, a history that spans decades, Cold War tensions, bureaucratic infighting and a multitude of seemingly impossible engineering challenges.But it's much more than merely the cold facts of how the nuts and bolts all came together. It's about the people...the men, women, astronauts, engineers, managers, and contractors who had the vision, faith in themselves and sheer guts to believe the impossible could be done; that a reusable, manned, winged craft could be built to routinely fly to and from earth orbit. There are stories of courage and heart-accelerating fear in these pages that even I, as an astronaut, was unaware of. --R. Mike Mullane, NASA Astronaut (Ret.), USAF Col., (Ret.), author of Riding Rockets Beautifully researched and written, Into The Black tells the true, complete story of the Space Shuttle better than it's ever been told before. --Col. Chris Hadfield, astronaut, author, Space Station commander