A review by lizabethstucker
The Apollo Murders by Chris Hadfield

4.0

4 out of 5.

Kazimieras "Kaz" Zemeckis' future as a test pilot and astronaut selectee is destroyed when a bird strike led to his canopy exploding, the plastic shrapnel causing him to lose his left eye.  Five years later he's sent by the U.S. Navy to the Houston Manned Spacecraft Center to be the military liaison for the Apollo 18 crew.

The mission, completely funded by the Department of Defense, will be the first all-military spaceflight whose classified purpose would be determined by the U.S. Air Force.  The actions of the Soviet space program, both orbiting Earth and on the  Moon itself causes rapid changes in the Apollo mission and schedule.  Espionage, romance, science, and a man caught between his life and his past all combine into an engrossing thriller.

NOTE:  This has nothing to do with the horror film APOLLO 18.

The main action is set in 1973, with a few flashbacks and jumps from Houston, Texas, to Russia and elsewhere.  Chris Hadfield is a man of many, many talents.  He's a former fighter pilot, astronaut who was Commander of the Space Station, caught my attention with a YouTube video of him singing David Bowie's "Space Oddity" in the Space Station, and numerous talks and non-fiction books.  Now he shares his ability to weave an enthralling story of what might've been.

As Hadfield stated in the start of the book, "Many of these people are real.  Much of the actually happened."  He even provided a partial list of who and what is real in the back of the book.  If you're curious, I highly recommend Googling, but be prepared to fall down a rabbit hole.

I do believe it is a bit too long at 480 pages, could've benefited by tighter editing.  That said, it was a fun read, one I binged almost all night.  It also brought back a lot of memories for me, having grown up just south of Cape Canaveral with a father who worked in the program from slightly before 1959 until 1970.  Highly recommend to my fellow space enthusiasts.