Endurance, Young Readers Edition: My Year in Space and How I Got There
Endurance, Young Readers Edition: My Year in Space and How I Got There
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Random House
Annotation: Adapted from the memoir of NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, who spent a record-breaking year in space.
Genre: [Biographies]
 
Reviews: 5
Catalog Number: #200532
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Publisher: Random House
Copyright Date: 2020
Edition Date: 2020 Release Date: 02/11/20
Pages: 315 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates
ISBN: Publisher: 1-524-76427-2 Perma-Bound: 0-7804-6614-4
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-1-524-76427-2 Perma-Bound: 978-0-7804-6614-2
Dewey: 921
LCCN: 2018019956
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist

Kelly, the author of My Journey to the Stars (2017), an autobiographical picture book, now presents a young readers' edition of Endurance: A Year in Space, a Lifetime of Discovery (2017). Like the original book, it traces Kelly's childhood, his initially unpromising academic background, and what motivated him to change. But mainly, it focuses on his years as an astronaut and the accomplishment for which he's best known, living for almost a year continuously on the International Space Station (ISS). Few people have such an unusual story to tell, and Kelly makes the most of his experiences as an astronaut, offering vividly detailed accounts of daily life in orbit, anecdotes about hair-raising moments during space walks and reentry, and heartening stories of cooperation between Russians and Americans working and living together on the ISS. Black-and-white photos appear throughout the book, and a 16-page insert offers color photos. While the amount of detail may be daunting for some readers, those who are intrigued by space travel will find this a fascinating book.

Horn Book

Kelly conversationally recounts his life--from childhood through his military career to his missions as a NASA astronaut--in anecdotes underscoring his determination and can-do attitude. Much of the book is devoted to Kelly's year on the ISS, providing a detailed portrait of life in space. Many black-and-white photographs (as well as a section of full-color images) from throughout his life are interspersed. Glos., ind.

Kirkus Reviews

Kelly recalls piloting space shuttles and living aboard the International Space Station.Pared down from the 2017 version for adults, stripped of its profanity, and rearranged into a linear narrative, this memoir still manages to be slow off the launch pad, woodenly conventional (if infused with deadpan humor), and anticlimactic at the close. Kelly begins with his very earliest memories and traces his youth from an epiphanic encounter with Tom Wolfe's The Right Stuff ("I closed the book that night a different person") to military-style nautical training ("a different person") and graduation from New York's Maritime College ("a completely different person"). Experiences as a U.S. Navy test pilot led to astronaut training, two shuttle flights, and two ISS gigs. In an apparent bid for attention from young readers he comes off throughout as positively obsessed with space toilets and the diapers American astronauts wear when bathroom trips are not an option. Of (perhaps) greater interest are his memories of working and living with colleagues from Russia and other countries after the space shuttle program ended. These are enlivened by comments about space food ("The Russians also have something called ‘the Appetizing Appetizer,' which it is not") and other details seldom if ever found in other astronaut biographies. He closes with a tally of general-issue life lessons. Finished photos and backmatter not seen.Occasionally amusing, rarely fresh, this expands the author's picture-book account, My Journey to the Stars (illustrated by André Ceolin, 2017), without adding much significant. (Memoir. 10-16)

School Library Journal

Gr 6 Up-Kelly spent a year in space onboard the International Space Station (ISS), but that is just one of his incredible achievements. Kelly and his twin brother Mark are both celebrated space travelers, but they did not journey the same path, and Kelly does a wonderful job of detailing his rockier start. Good grades and success seemed far away when he first picked up a copy of Tom Wolfe's The Right Stuff ; Kelly was failing his premed classes and was directionless when he read Wolfe's account of the hardships early astronauts endured. The narrative details heartaches, tragedies, close calls, and his time onboard ISS. Kelly's story is relatable and the plot mostly focuses on showing young people the amount of hard work he had to do to achieve his dream, while simultaneously making sure readers understand that it's never too late to start a new path. Photos are included throughout. VERDICT An engaging and high-flying read for nonfiction and space lovers alike. A fine addition to large nonfiction collections. Traci Glass, Multnomah County Library, OR

Word Count: 72,759
Reading Level: 7.3
Interest Level: 4-7
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 7.3 / points: 13.0 / quiz: 198094 / grade: Middle Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:9.6 / points:18.0 / quiz:Q75825
Lexile: 1070L
Guided Reading Level: Y
Fountas & Pinnell: Y

My earliest memories are of the warm summer nights when my mother, Patricia, tried to settle Mark and me to sleep in our house on Mitchell Street in West Orange, New Jersey. It was still light outside, and I could hear the sounds of the neighborhood drifting in through the open windows--older kids yelling, the thumps of basketballs against driveways, the rustling of breezes high in the trees, the faraway sounds of traffic. I remember the feeling of drifting weightless between summer and sleep.
 
My brother and I were born in 1964. Members of my father's side of our family lived all up and down our block, aunts and uncles and cousins in both directions. The town was separated by a hill. The more well-off lived "up the hill," and we lived "down the hill." I remember waking early in the morning with my brother when we were small, maybe two years old. My parents were sleeping, so we were on our own. We got bored, figured out how to open the back door, and left the house to explore, two toddlers wandering the neighborhood. We made our way to a gas station, where we played in the grease until the owner found us. He knew where we lived and stuck us back in the house without waking my parents. When my mother finally got up and came downstairs, she was confused by the grease all over us. Later that day, the owner came over and told her what had happened.
 
One afternoon when we were in kindergarten, my mother told us she had an important task for us. She held a white envelope in front of her as if it were a special prize. Mom told us to put the letter in a mailbox directly across the street from our house. But first, she warned us that it wasn't safe to cross in the middle of the street--we could be hit by a car. So we were to walk up to the corner and cross the street there, then walk back to the mailbox on the other side of the street and mail the letter. When our job was done, we needed to take the long way home, walking to the corner to cross again. We promised to follow her instructions.
 
Mark and I set off and walked up to the corner. We looked both ways, crossed, and made our way to the mailbox. Mark boosted me up to pull down the heavy blue handle, and I proudly deposited the letter in the slot. With our job complete, it was time to head back home.
 
"I'm not walking all the way back to the corner," Mark announced. "I'm just going to cross the street right here."
 
"Mom said we should cross at the corner," I reminded him. "You're going to get hit by a car."
 
But Mark had made up his mind.
 
I set off back toward the corner myself, eager to get home and be praised for having followed directions. I reached the corner, crossed, and turned back toward the house. The next thing I heard was car brakes squealing and the thump of a collision. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw something the size and shape of a kid flying up into the air.
 
Mark sat, dazed, in the middle of the street, while the frantic driver fussed over him. Someone ran for our mother, an ambulance came, and Mark was whisked away to the hospital. I spent the rest of the afternoon and evening with my uncle Joe and his family. I was left at home to worry about my rule-breaking brother, as I was steaming over the unfairness of having to stay home and eat liver for dinner with our uncle while waiting for news about my wounded twin. Mark had a concussion and had a short hospital stay and got lots of attention, while I felt like I got the worse end of the deal.
 
This was only one of Mark's many hospital stays during our childhood. Mark broke his arm sliding down a handrail. Mark had appendicitis. Mark stepped on a broken glass bottle of worms and got blood poisoning. Mark was taken into the city for a series of tests to see whether he had bone cancer (he didn't). We both played with BB guns recklessly, but only Mark got shot in the foot and then damaged by a botched surgery.
 
As our childhoods went on, we continued to take crazy risks. We both got hurt. We both got stitches so often we sometimes would have the doctors remove the stitches from the previous injury during the same visit new stitches were put in. But only Mark had to stay overnight at the hospital. I was always jealous of the extra attention this got him.
 
When we were about five, my parents bought a little vacation bungalow on the Jersey Shore, and some of my best memories from childhood are from that time.
 
At the shore, in the mornings, Mark and I had a kind of freedom my own children never had. We'd spend all day on the dock behind our bungalow, waiting to feel a crab nibble on the bait. We built rafts out of spare fence planks and set sail on Barnegat Bay. I remember falling off a dock before I knew how to swim and sinking into the dark and murky water of the lagoon. I didn't know what to do about it. I simply watched the bubbles of the last of my air rising. Then my father, who had seen my blond hair drifting just above the water, grabbed a handful and pulled me out.
 
When Mark and I were in second grade, our parents sold the place on the Jersey Shore so they could buy a house "up the hill." They wanted us to be able to go to a better public school. We moved onto a street lined with giant green oak trees, aptly named Greenwood Avenue. It's odd that once we moved, we hardly ever saw our family on Mitchell Street again. Except for his parents, my father was often not on speaking terms with various friends and family members.
 
 
 
 
 
 



Excerpted from Endurance, Young Readers Edition: My Year in Space and How I Got There by Scott Kelly
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Discover what it's like to spend a year in space in this awe-inspiring memoir from a real-life NASA astronaut who did just that!

Prepare to blast off with astronaut Scott Kelly as he takes readers on a journey through his year aboard the International Space Station and his life prior to becoming a true American hero.

Discover the extreme challenges of long-term spaceflight, the pressures of living in close quarters with people from many countries, the extremely dangerous risk of colliding with space junk and the unnerving feeling of not being able to help if tragedy strikes at home. Kelly's struggles in school and how he overcame them after a book sparked his dream to become a test pilot and astronaut prove it's never too late to find your path.

This personal and fascinating story, newly adapted for young readers from the New York Times bestseller, will encourage aspiring astronauts of all ages to believe in the impossible and reach for the stars.

"An engaging and high-flying read for nonfiction and space lovers alike." --School Library Journal

"Those who are intrigued by space travel will find this a fascinating book." --Booklist

"Recommend this to readers who are interested in current events and anyone who wants an in-depth look at a STEM-related career." --VOYA


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