Strange Angel, George Pendle
Strange Angel, George Pendle
List: $29.99 | Sale: $21.00
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Strange Angel
The Otherworldly Life of Rocket Scientist John Whiteside Parsons

Author: George Pendle

Narrator: James Langton

Unabridged: 11 hr 16 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/14/2019


Synopsis

Now a CBS All Access series: “A riveting tale of rocketry, the occult, and boom-and-bust 1920s and 1930s Los Angeles” (Booklist).The Los Angeles Times headline screamed: ROCKET SCIENTIST KILLED IN PASADENA EXPLOSION. The man known as Jack Parsons, a maverick rocketeer who helped transform a derided sci-fi plotline into actuality, was at first mourned as a scientific prodigy. But reporters soon uncovered a more shocking story: Parsons had been a devotee of the city’s occult scene.Fueled by childhood dreams of space flight, Parsons was a leader of the motley band of enthusiastic young men who founded the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a cornerstone of the American space program. But Parsons’s wild imagination also led him into a world of incantations and orgiastic rituals—if he could make rocketry a reality, why not black magic?George Pendle re-creates the world of John Parsons in this dazzling portrait of prewar superstition, cold war paranoia, and futuristic possibility. Peopled with such formidable real-life figures as Howard Hughes, Aleister Crowley, L. Ron Hubbard, and Robert Heinlein, Strange Angel explores the unruly consequences of genius.The basis for a new miniseries created by Mark Heyman and produced by Ridley Scott, this biography “vividly tells the story of a mysterious and forgotten man who embodied the contradictions of his time . . . when science fiction crashed into science fact. . . . [It] would make a compelling work of fiction if it weren’t so astonishingly true” (Publishers Weekly).

About George Pendle

George Pendle is an author and journalist. He writes about contemporary art, historical fiction, imaginary countries, real monsters, mad scientists, sane occultists, and the color blue.He has written for the Economist, the Financial Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Times (London), the Guardian, the Observer, frieze, Cabinet, Bidoun, Modern Painters, and Icon.He has also written signs for the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David on December 29, 2011

I grew up near JPL (the Jet Propulsion Laboratory) in Pasadena and heard a few of the stories about John Parsons, about the way he was a “Satanist,” and how his obsession eventually cost him his life. Of course the realty behind the stories of the scientific prodigy were way more complicated than the......more

Goodreads review by Thomas on July 03, 2020

This is quite an entertaining biography of a very self-contradictory, witches brew of a life. It’s just one of those Amazing Stories. (If you’re sci-fi lover, you’ll get the reference.) Jack Parsons was a truly odd man. I really don’t know what to make of this guy. It’s pretty clear that he was a bri......more

Goodreads review by John Carter on November 03, 2012

A mindboggling story of a different world, Los Angeles in the years before World War 2, when rocket science was confined to comic strips - and a tiny few dreamers blowing stuff up in Pasadena's Arroyo Seco. One such was John Parsons, not quite the blueblood he acted, but an intuitive autodidact with......more

Goodreads review by Michael on December 12, 2012

This book has to be history, because nobody could make up something so bizarre. Scion of a wealthy Pasadena family, Parsons was one of the founding fathers of modern rocketry (JATO, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, castable fuels), despite a lack of formal training or credentials. At the same time as he wa......more