Review “A fantastic account of the American space program with its successes and perils, blended with the twists and turns of domestic life and his various illnesses.”—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review “In calm, brainy prose and with surprising humor, [Parazynski] writes, with coauthor Flory, about his adventures in going where few have gone before him, be that space or Mount Everest…His relatable, down-to-earth discourse mingles the ordinary with the extraordinary and will have readers feeling like they’re catching up with a best friend—one who happens to be an astronaut—over beers.” —Booklist“Plenty of former astronauts have written about their careers in books that tend to sound alike with references to family values in the face of profound risk, a hint of philosophy, boisterous camaraderie, natural bravado, true pride, and true or false humility. Among the proliferation of these, Parazynski’s is presented with a bit more panache. A genial, readable account of mountain climbing, spaceship travel, and other adventures.” —Kirkus Reviews“[The Sky Below is] the story of a remarkable life full of adventure on Earth and beyond.” —Houston Chronicle“Parazynski is as disarmingly down-to-earth as he is heroically stoic. You’re with him every minute in this hair-raising memoir, as he wrangles with wayward tethers outside the space station Mir, ‘sutures’ a solar array to the International Space Station, or gazes at the glittering tapestry of stars from Earth’s orbit.” —Nature“In his book, Parazynski’s life unfolds across chapters through detailed retellings. You read on as he attempts to conquer some of life’s greatest summits, finding family, love, and adventure along the way.” —Houstonia“Dr. Scott Parazynski's new book, The Sky Below, chronicles an amazing life.” —Forbes“An in-depth review of the many adventures of former NASA shuttle astronaut Scott Parazynski, it covers his many accomplishments and at the same time keeping a very conversational tone. For those interested in the background of some of America’s more recent space flyers, it has much to offer.” —Space Flight Insider“The best explorer autobiographies deal equally with inner and external challenges. In The Sky Below: A True Story of Summits, Space, and Speed Scott Parazynski strikes a perfect balance between the two facets of what goes into the making of an explorer—on and off this planet.” —SpaceRef“Scott masterfully brings to life the skill and ingenuity of the entire NASA team during the dramatic and unprecedented repair of a live solar array aboard the International Space Station. Just as Mission Control saved the day during Apollo 13, Scott and team worked together, against long odds, to deal with a truly critical situation. The Sky Below is the compelling story of a born adventurer who, raised in the midst of the Apollo program, carries on the great American tradition of bold exploration, innovation, and scientific discovery.” —Jim Lovell, Captain, USN (retired), veteran of four NASA space missions including Apollo 13, and author of Lost Moon“In The Sky Below, Scott Parazynski captures the true essence of what it is to be an explorer/adventurer. From underwater to the top of Everest to the ISS, Scott carried me along as if I was right there alongside of him. I could not stop reading as he takes you from one adventure to the next. I have read many books by astronauts and The Sky Below is one of the best. I thank Scott for giving us a glimpse of and the feeling of going to the edge.” —Charlie Duke, Brigadier General, USAF (retired), Apollo 16 lunar module pilot, and Apollo 11 capcom“Taking on big risks for even greater rewards requires careful planning, resourcefulness, rigorous training, passion, and creativity. This mindset certainly fueled our great nation since its founding, and even took us to the moon during the Apollo program. Scott has taken on enormous challenges while also learning from inevitable setbacks that come with risks. The adventures of The Sky Below will leave you breathless, while the lessons learned will inspire others in their passion to reach their own impossible dream.” —Gene Cernan, Captain, USN (retired), Gemini and Apollo astronaut, and the last man to walk on the moon during Apollo 17; author of The Last Man on the Moon“Courage, intrigue, perseverance, risk, and discovery sound like great fiction, but add humility, humor, passion, and service to humanity and country, and you have the real-life challenges and adventures of astronaut Dr. Scott Parazynski. Only someone as extraordinary as Scott could accomplish so much in just one amazing life. Add dedication to inspiring youth to pursue their dreams, as well as devotion to his own children, and you have the dramatic page-turner, The Sky Below.” —June Scobee Rodgers, PhD, founding chair, Challenger Center for Space Science Education, and author of Silver Linings and the Star Challengers series“Former astronaut, Scott Parazynski, is a dear and close personal friend. We met when my husband Rick joined the astronaut corps in 1995. Preparing for Rick’s flight in space as the commander, Scott was a natural choice to be with our family throughout the launch week in Florida. Famous people have real lives just like everyone else; some are just more extraordinary. Scott has climbed Mount Everest twice with one successful summit; he flew in space five times and spacewalked, but he also taught my newly fatherless seven-year-old son how to ride a bicycle. He faithfully showed up every day to my home in the aftermath of the tragedy to support and help any way he possibly could and even wore a tie. He picked up my parents at the airport the day of the tragedy and brought them to my grief-stricken home. His quiet strength and leadership comforted our brokenness. He navigated us through uncharted waters of grief. Scott was very instrumental in the renaming of Columbia Point in Colorado’s Sangre de Cristo Mountains and led all the families on a life-changing adventure up the mountain to the memorial for the crew. He even ushered at my wedding of the second love of my life, Bill Thompson. Scott is truly a friend that loves at all times.” —Evelyn Husband Thompson, author of High Calling: The Courageous Life and Faith of Space Shuttle Columbia Commander Rick Husband Read more About the Author Scott Parazynski was inducted into the Astronaut Hall of Fame in 2016, and is the recipient of many prestigious awards, including five NASA Space Flight Medals, two NASA Distinguished Service Medals, two NASA Exceptional Service Medals, the Aviation Week Laureate Award, the Antarctica Service Medal, the National Eagle Scout Association’s Outstanding Eagle Scout Award, and the Lowell Thomas Award from the Explorers Club. Now a tech start-up CEO and a prolific inventor, he ventures into some of the world’s most extreme environments in the name of exploration and innovation. Scott and his wife, Meena Wadhwa, a renowned planetary scientist, divide their time between Houston, Texas, and Phoenix, Arizona. His most important role to date is serving as a doting husband and father of two children.Susy Flory is the New York Times bestselling author or coauthor of twelve books. She is a member of the Authors Guild and was recently named director of a San Francisco Bay Area writers’ conference. A breast cancer survivor, Susy celebrates life by riding a crazy ex-racehorse named Stetson, hiking in the High Sierras, and skiing black diamond runs whenever she can. Read more
R**K
Gripping true story, rarely matched adventures, well-written, inspiring
MUCH ON THE PLUS SIDE. This book more than lives up to its title – “A true story of summits, space, and speed.” The personal and team adventures, inner and outer, of astronaut Scott Parazynski go beyond just space travel. We go to the top of the world twice, for Scott also takes us along on his two Mt. Everest climbs, harrowing and wondrous. He did his successful climb in his older years. How he relates the challenges with his earlier space travel brings out many insights into human endurance and “true grit.” Adventures like this told in first person make me feel I WAS THERE! To add to the strong, straightforward story telling is co-writer Susy Flory, a New York Times #1 bestseller of 11 books. You get descriptions that appeal to our senses. Example: “I breathe in the scent of sunbaked rock and pines trees while my hands sweat through the chalk.”No bragging, just telling in a humble and personal style, Scott relates his five Shuttle flights, first in 1994, last in 2007. Before that, he tells of his education in biology, medicine and Olympic try-outs. Much humor, too, in such stories as his experience with John Glenn on a flight, carrying toadfish for experiments. He also shares his wonder on big things such as seeing an orbital sunrise from space and one from the top of Mt. Everest.His greatest wonders, he admits, are first the love of his parents toward him and how they encouraged him to aim high. Then there’s the love of his wife and his two children. Next all the adventures and explorations that still await him and other people.There are so many insights through Parazynski’s life which I’m sure will help me explore my life anew. This book is definitely worth a second read—and much thought. Sure, between all the high adventures there are rather mundane events—just like regular life. Sometimes the authors, I feel, make too much of those regular events. But overall this book is a welcome read among all the fiction books, and so much more than most books of any kind. The “Show Media” episodes and photos are a good beginning but not enough of them. I’m sure more of this technique will be used in future Kindle books. But it's worth a look at in this book.
A**R
WOW!
What an amazing story! It has rekindled my interest in NASA and space. Awestruck throughout, how brave these people are. And Scott is a true specimen of how dreams can come true. But the most inspiring tidbit in this book, for me, is how he found such true love with his second marriage. My 35 year old son is going through a heartbreaking divorce. I am certain something wonderful will come out of the heartbreak he is currently going through. Scott, I don't know if you read reviews of your book, but thank you so much for sharing your life with all of us. I'm here in Hawaii anxiously waiting for the International Space Station to pass by and be visible. Looking up at the sky with a whole new perspective! Highly recommend this book to anyone remotely interested in science & space. I know I have read a good book when I can't stop talking about it!
F**R
Great book cursed with poor design.
Scott Parazynski has some very interesting stories to tell. Like many astronauts, he tells them in a way that skips the flowery language and poetic metaphors. That's not a bad thing. Something about people who could brag choosing not to makes for more powerful reading.At times the technical details left me a little unable to picture what was happening, or understand the dangers in, for example, a perilous rock climbing expedition. I honestly prefer being briefly lost to other authors who will devote whole chapters to teaching you intricate details about something just for a single anecdote. You can catch enough to take Parazynski's word for it, which is good enough for me.I've just finished reading two other memoirs from people who, in reality, had led pretty uneventful lives. This book is the exact opposite. While the two smooth-sailors did all they could to inject drama into the most everyday of occurrences, Parazynski tends to fly right over little, insignificant things like finding himself caught in the middle of a country exploding into civil war. Again, it's that cool-as-a-comet astronaut thing, and it makes for a refreshing read.The wooty-doo "Kindle In Motion" feature sadly reaches its peak on the title page, when the author's autograph appears in front of you, letter by letter, ghost-like. It's very cool, although I can't get it to repeat. Mostly it's a gimmick, that can feel a little after-the-fact, as if some Amazon programmer ran through the book later and said, "Hey! Look! We could make the line on the mountain appear in segments! SEGMENTS! AWESOME!" Yeah...not so much. It's an interesting technology and I see how it could be wonderful, but I think it would have to be something that's planned for and thought about right from the beginning of a project, which makes it something of a miss in the memoir world.The reason I gave this four stars instead of five is a design issue. I don't know what it looks like with the KIM features turned off, but with them on each page had topographical map-style lines behind all of the text. At first I didn't think it was a big deal, but after a while I started feeling a headache coming on and realized that I had been straining to read the text. The first page of each chapter is on a similar background, but with the colors switched, so you're looking at white text on a black background with much more visible lines. While many readers may not even notice, this could be an issue for readers with vision problems. I can understand wanting to make the chapter intro pages fancy, but I don't get the idea behind putting a background on each and every page of text. It would be nice if you could somehow turn the background off but leave the KIM features on. (It might be possible and I just haven't found the settings. My Kindle Fire isn't my main ereader so I'm not as familiar with the settings.)
J**R
Intensely interesting read...
The book goes from one intense situation to another...never letting down for long! However, it left me with a feeling of sadness (maybe because I am also an only child) with a perception of incredible selfishness at all Scott accomplished at the expense of his family and marriage! You are left with a happy ending, but it still doesn't overcome the sacrifice to get there in my mind!
W**A
Exciting and captivating.
I really enjoyed reading this book. It is well written and an exciting read. I felt as though I was part of the missions floating in space. The author is a true American hero.
R**T
A real-life action hero
Book reads like a sci-fi action movie. Though I went through it in alternating audio book and e-book, it's riveting enough to keep going back to in whatever form is convenient for...
A**R
Boring astronaut toots his own horn. Not a good read.
Felt like his livejournal rather than a guide on how to prepare to be an astronaut. I would think someone who gets to travel to space would be intelligent or inspirational but he...
R**E
Fun read
Enjoyable biography of an astronaut with a fascinating and varied life. Additional graphics were a good addition for the Kindle version.
U**L
Inspirational
I really enjoyed this book and was inspired by the man. Very interesting life story.
D**N
Astronaut story, good Kindle read
Tag along with a legendary astronaut as he recounts some of his extraordinary life adventures. The Kindle photos and video clips are great add-ones that support the story.
M**T
Excellent Read
Totally enjoyed the telling of this man's accomplishments. Never bragging, told humbly and with gratitude for his teams and support people.
K**R
Very gifted man, telling his story as an astronaut
This book is all about an A-type personality, filled with ego, intellengence, high intellect , love for adventure, and so many other things.
G**E
What a great story
Humorous, entertaining, and enlightening. Scott says this was a page turner and he was exactly right.
T**Y
Inside Look at the World Beyond!
This told me a lot about how someone got to be an astronaut and the incredible life he had both before and after.
Trustpilot
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