We started reading Jules Verne's "From the Earth to the Moon" last week. Written in 1865, this book is set in the days following the US civil war and opens with a bored Baltimore Gun club trying to figure out what to do with itself. Unable to just start a war, and bored without reasons to make their guns go boom, these gentlemen, are led into a brave new day by their president, a day that includes developing a gun capable of launching men to the moon.
While initially a thing of joy, this book's ecstatic beginning quickly devolved into chapters of of math upon math upon math. And then some more math.
There was a lot of math.
And it wasn't all right or all wrong. But it will be fun (yes, fun) to tear a part. As we continue our way through this book, note the science you find here, and let's see how this science has or hasn't stood up over the past 150 years!
While initially a thing of joy, this book's ecstatic beginning quickly devolved into chapters of of math upon math upon math. And then some more math.
There was a lot of math.
And it wasn't all right or all wrong. But it will be fun (yes, fun) to tear a part. As we continue our way through this book, note the science you find here, and let's see how this science has or hasn't stood up over the past 150 years!
Cheers,
Pamela