Into the Blue: American Writing on Aviation and Spaceflight: A Library of America Special Publication
 
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Into the Blue revisits the remarkable trajectory of Americans in  air and space, gathering sixty of the best eyewitness and participant  narratives from Benjamin Franklin's letters on the first hot air  balloons to Chris Jones's account of being marooned on the  International Space Station. Here are those who made flight happen:  Orville and Wilbur Wright, self-taught pioneers whose homespun  invention stunned the world; World War I ace Eddie Rickenbacker, whose  memoirs (excerpted here for the first time in unedited form) describe  the frightening novelties of aerial combat; and daredevils like Texas  barnstormer Slats Rodgers and test pilot Jimmy Collins. Ernest  Hemingway offers a vivid dispatch on a 1922 flight over France, and  Gertrude Stein muses on the look of America from the air; Charles A.  Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart narrate their groundbreaking transatlantic  flights; Ralph Ellison reflects on the experience of African American  airmen at Tuskegee; William F. Buckley Jr. recounts his mishaps as an  amateur pilot; Wernher von Braun envisions a space station of the  future, while astronauts John Glenn, Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin  provide firsthand recollections of the conquest of space. Here too,  among many other subjects, are scenes and episodes in the development  of commercial aviation, from the hiring of the first stewardesses and  the high stress lives of air traffic controllers to the new ubiquity of  what Walter Kirn calls "Airworld." A thirty-two-page insert offers  photographs, some previously unpublished, of the writers and their  crafts.