People usually associate squads of bespectacled engineers and
scientists as being the sole guardians of space. Beyond: Visions
of the Interplanetary Probes by Michael Benson is the type of
book that rationalizes and moreover encourages the inclusion
of other specialists, especially those in the arts. Containing
295 photographs chosen both for their artistic, awe inspiring
impact as well as their voluminous scientific content, the reader
will want to quickly put aside numerical calculations about orbital
mechanics and let their eyes float across the vistas of other
planets. It is easy to imagine that only a thin visor of a helmet
separates them from the visions in the book. Michael Benson's
collection of breathtakingly clear images gives credit to the
machines that took the pictures and the will of all the bespectacled
and clear sighted individuals who worked so hard to get the machines
to their complete their mission.
This book is all about its photographs. These come as both true
colour and black and white. They range from compact portraits
to large expanses. In keeping true to the sources, collages of
contiguous single frames give fantastic perspectives including
a 110cm x 26cm full colour image of a dust cloud as it storms
across a broad swathe of the Martian surface. Each image is silhouetted
against a matte black background that enhances the reader's feeling
of 'being there'. My personal favourites are views of satellites
with their host planet behind them and the satellite's shadow
etched on the host's surface. The details evident in black and
white shots of crater rims softened by dunes are better than
most tour guides of earthly locales. These photographs are like
beauty contest entrants each vying to allure the judge to vote
for them.
The photographs are grouped into chapters or collections for
each planet, except Pluto, for which no clear images exist. Chapters
are introduced with a brief passage discussing the imaging history,
the relevant probes and some of the provocative visual features.
Often a planet's chapter includes its satellites though there
is a separate chapter for Earth's moon as well as a chapter for
asteroids within the Asteroid Belt. Either adjoining or nearby
each photograph is a caption identifying the probe that acquired
the image, the date this occurred and a description. As a bonus,
there are black and white block drawings of the probes themselves.
Leading this beauty contest is a provocative essay where Arthur
C. Clarke muses about future explorers. After showing off all
the contestants, Benson delivers a short essay on the selection
process and the image processing. The book concludes in an afterward
by Lawrence Weschler where he contemplates the relative importance
of humankind in the context of so much other-world beauty.
I liked the black background and paper type of the book though
black, as is its nature, shows up printing artifacts (not many)
and fingerprints (becoming more frequent). In addition, sometimes
description on the captions do not identify the significance
of a picture. Perhaps this may be because there are no features
to remark on and only the emotive force caused a picture to be
selected.
The clarity of the photographs is so great that I can easily
forget myself and try to touch the textures and shapes to gain
a tactile sense. It seems I need more than one sense to fully
absorb the grandiose scale of the subjects themselves and the
specialised effort that made them come into being. I have been
perhaps a little bit too guilty of self importance, but after
viewing this book my self estimation of where I stand in the
scale of things has changed, for the better.
-- Mark Mortimer, Universe Today online, January 29, 2004
[http://www.universetoday.com]
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