How to survive on the moon Lunar lessons from a rocket scientist

Joalda Morancy

Book - 2025

Humans are heading back to the Moon. But once we get there, how on the Moon will we stay alive? In this practical guide, future astronauts will learn how to dodge meteorites, shield themselves from dangerous radiation, and grow the food they'll need to survive life away from our home planet. As well as practical tips, Morancy lifts a lid on some of the coolest developments in lunar science-including the possibility of building underground cities in lava tubes and the giant catapult that could be used to get stuff back to Earth. Like Andy Weir's The Martian everything in this space book is based on real, groundbreaking science. And no one is better placed to write it: when they're not writing kids' books, Joalda Morancy i...s building the lunar lander the Artemis missions will use to take astronauts-including the first woman and first person of color -to the surface!

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Neon Squid US 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Joalda Morancy (-)
Physical Description
48 p. : col. ill. ; 28 cm
Audience
3456.
ISBN
9781684494477
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Advice and background for early lunar settlers from a certified rocket scientist. The narrative opens with an illustration of the brown-skinned author reading from a book titledTip-Top Moon Tips. Morancy then invites all "adventurers and cosmic thrill-seekers" to take a near-future flight powered by NASA's Space Launch System to our neighbor the moon. "Surviving an environment that is actively trying to kill you is a challenging feat," the author goes on, but by carefully heeding the book's warnings about hazards ranging from radiation to deadly, insidious dust, new arrivals may live long enough not only to explore the surface, but also to build flourishing colonies in subsurface lava tubes and to gear up for an expedition to Mars. In a utopian vein, Morancy also extrapolates (though not in specifics) the eventual growth of a lunar government, economy, and "the kind of society we wish to see on Earth." Cushley illustrates these visions with detail-crammed scenes of small, racially and culturally diverse figures--starting off with Morancy and a gallery of other contemporary space experts, then going on to depict workers either in vacuum suits or indoor garb engaged in tasks ranging from gardening and governing to shooting Earth-bound cargoes out into orbit using a giant catapult or a futuristic space elevator. A lively mix of facts and informed speculation. (glossary, index)(Informational picture book. 7-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.