Spacecam: In Co-Operation With NASA by Terry Hope


Spacecam: In Co-Operation With NASA
Title : Spacecam: In Co-Operation With NASA
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0715321641
ISBN-10 : 9780715321645
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 253
Publication : First published January 1, 2005

Culled from throughout the fifty year history of the space program, these images present stunning scenes from this planet and several others, all the while revealing the breathtaking beauty and mystery of outer space.


Spacecam: In Co-Operation With NASA Reviews


  • Brian Clegg

    I love a good book of space pictures, but it's a difficult balance. For a book to be readable it can't be too big - yet you want the pictures to be as large as possible. Spacecam comes in at the bottom end of the compromise. It's about the size of a trade paperback, but in landscape format, which helps with the pictures. I'd really like it to be a little bigger to get the full glory of these images, but it's big enough that the shots can be quite stunning, while at the same time it is a manageable size.

    Having said that it is surprisingly heavy as it packs in 256 glossy pages - a lot for a book like this. After a couple of pages of introduction, this is a picture book with captions, rather than a flowing text, which I don't generally like, but the quality of the images and quite informative captions (packing a lot in at the price of pretty small text) make the best of the format.

    There's a good mix here. Lovely colour shots from the Apollo missions, excellent Hubble space shots, a good range of photos from planetary missions and a wide range of satellite shots of the Earth - because we shouldn't forget that arguably the great successes of the space missions have been those that look back on our planet.

    It's always a difficult choice when doing this kind of book to decide on the design of the pages. I personally find the black backgrounds of many space photography books, including this one, a little oppressive - I prefer the crisp contrast of a light coloured page - but it's bearable.

    Whether we're looking at collapsing ice-sheets, the scarily Lord of the Rings-like Cat's Eye nebula or an Apollo astronaut collecting lunar samples, there's a lot to enjoy here. I think inevitably this may work best as a dip-in book, the sort of thing you might keep in the loo, but having said that, I found it intriguing enough to go through it beginning to end on a train journey. All in all, a very good attempt at what is inevitably a difficult type of book to pull off.

    Review first published on
    www.popularscience.co.uk and reproduced with permission.

  • Chris

    I'm a sucker for these beautiful photo books. From Apollo to Hubble, this book provides some of the most fantastic reproductions of space (and some terrestrial) photos I've ever seen.