Space-age prophet Arthur C. Clarke, one of three eloquent, forward-looking
contributors to this pioneering and magnificent collection of
pictures generated by the robotic space probes Galileo, Voyager,
Pathfinder, Magellan, Viking, and other less commonly known mechanical
explorers, describes these breathtaking images as "some
of the greatest landscape pictures ever taken." The recognition
that these miraculous images (supremely reproduced) are nothing
less than works of art is the impetus for this resplendent volume,
and discerning writer and documentary filmmaker Benson did, in
fact, serve as the book's curator, searching through tens of
thousands of digital images to find the most striking and beautiful
scenes of the solar system, many never published before. Each
sequence of finely detailed portraits of Earth, the Sun, the
Moon, and our sister planets is sublimely exhilarating, particularly
those of the volatile Jovian system, blue and serene Neptune,
and elegant Saturn, which Benson describes as "cosmic perfection." Not
only do Clarke, Benson, and Lawrence Weschler celebrate the ingenious
technology of robotic space probes and their, as Weschler writes, "unparalleled
ability to convey the sheer beauty and mystery" of the solar
system, they also ponder, with great acumen, the metaphysical
questions raised by these awesome new visions of the glorious
cosmos.
-- Donna Seaman, Starred Review in Booklist
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