Go for Orbit

$29.95

One of America’s First Six Women Astronauts Finds Her Space

Hardcover with Dust Jacket

 

Winner of the Gold Benjamin Franklin IBPA Awards Autobiography Category in 2016, Dr. Seddon’s memoir captures the unlikely story of a young girl with a dream whose hard work, perseverance, and willingness to take risks prepared her to become part of the history of space travel.

Venturing into space on three spectacular missions, working on important projects for NASA, weathering the story of Challenger, marrying a fellow astronaut, and bearing Astrotots, that child who looked skyward long ago is now an inspiration to all who aim high to find their own orbit.

 

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Winner of the 2016 Ben Franklin award for best Autobiography/Memoir!

Go For Orbit took home the Gold in the Autobiography/Memoir category at the 2016 IBPA awards.

Go For Orbit took home
the Gold in the
Autobiography/Memoir
category at the
2016 IBPA awards.

 

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING…

Charged with the training for the 1978 class of astronaut, I was worried. Of the thirty five, six were women. Could they withstand the rigorous training, especially the smallest, Rhea Seddon? In her memoir, Rhea describes her struggles to become an accepted member of a once all-male bastion. I was proud to watch her eventually make three successful space flights. Her book shows how she managed not only the work, but also a home and family—all with style and grace.  Astronaut Alan Bean, Apollo and Skylab Astronaut

 

As one of the first female astronauts, Dr. Rhea Seddon was a pioneer in every sense of that word.  Many books have been written by the men of the space program, but only a rare few by the women and fewer yet by the original six and NONE by own hand.  I’m anticipating that Rhea’s book will give the reader a first glimpse into things that have never before been revealed through the perspective of a woman: the walk through the doors of the ultimate men’s club…the astronaut office…and all the barrier-breaking resistance that act entailed; the competition for the most coveted of titles, “First American Woman In Space”; the transcendental joy of spaceflight; the agony of Challenger; the fear that her own life dream might ultimately leave her children motherless; the extreme stress of the job on her marriage; the exhausting burden of competing with men under the microscope of the press.   You might have thought everything that could be said about astronauts and spaceflight has been said.  Not so, as I’m sure Astronaut Rhea Seddon’s new book will prove! – Astronaut Mike Mullane Author, Riding Rockets, The Outrageous Tales of a Space Shuttle Astronaut

Rhea Seddon and I embarked on a remarkable journey together in 1978, when we become two of the first six women astronauts in U.S. history.  The unique bond that formed among us as we weathered the intense media storm following our arrival on the scene and navigated the complex challenge of joining such a tightly-knit, all-male community has seasoned over the years into a very special friendship.  So I’m delighted that Rhea has stepped forth as the first of our six to tell her story first-hand.  I’m sure she will share the ups and downs, the laughs and heartaches, the weighty questions and everyday worries she experienced with candor and humor.  Her story will certainly be an inspiration to every woman striving to combine marriage, family and career. but it will speak to everyone who’s trying to reach for a star– Kathy Sullivan, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrator

 

Chapter Excerpt…

Fellow Astronaut Story Musgrave described it as a butterfly bolted to a bullet. The Shuttle itself had a beautiful grace about it as it glistened in the brightness of the huge Xenon lights. It had wings and round plump edges. The monstrous fuel tank and boosters looked plain, almost brutish, hiding so many millions of pounds of explosive materials. “We dare you to come closer, deary!” they whispered.

The fullness of my life had brought me to this moment. All the unlikely roads taken, the risks addressed, the difficulties overcome had led to this. The ride up the clanking rusty elevator which had withstood the blast of Apollo and earlier Shuttle flights would be my first upward push of that day. Across the narrow Orbiter access arm and into the belly of the beast or butterfly the men and I clamored, brave or feigning bravery, with the bravado of the fighter pilots we were or had come to emulate. We would sit atop the harnessed bomb until its fuse was lit. This was the culmination of years of preparation; there could be no turning back. How in heaven’s name had I gotten here?

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Weight 2 lbs

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