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From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <h-rev...@lists.h-net.org>
Date: Wed, Jul 1, 2020 at 12:05 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Environment]: Ockert on Buss, 'Willy Ley: Prophet
of the Space Age'
To: <h-rev...@lists.h-net.org>
Cc: H-Net Staff <revh...@mail.h-net.org>


Jared S. Buss.  Willy Ley: Prophet of the Space Age.  Gainesville
University Press of Florida, 2017.  Illustrations. xiii + 321 pp.
$34.95 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-8130-5443-8.

Reviewed by Ingrid Ockert (Science History Institute)
Published on H-Environment (July, 2020)
Commissioned by Daniella McCahey

If you peruse a used bookstore, you will likely stumble upon the name
Willy Ley. The German-born writer was prolific and his books on
fossils, space, and history fill the nooks and crannies of many
bookshops. My first Ley book was a gorgeous Technicolor book about
rockets, published in the late 1950s. As a teenager, I assumed that
Ley was the pen name of a scientist who moonlighted as a science
consultant for films that I adored (like Frau im Mond [1929]) and
television programs (like Disney's _Disneyland _space films). But
then I stumbled upon his short stories in pulp science fiction
magazines and a factual column in back issues of Galaxy magazine.
"Who was Willy Ley?" I always found myself wondering.

Thankfully for me, Jared S. Buss's stellar biography _Willy Ley:
Prophet of the Space Age_ answers all of my questions about this
quiet, modest pioneer of the Space Age. Even more important, Buss
successfully argues for Ley's inclusion as an important link between
the two cosmos: Alexander von Humboldt's and Carl Sagan's romantic
naturalism. Ley, Buss shows, was spellbound by the work of German
romantic naturalists in the 1920s. When he immigrated to the United
States and started writing for popular magazines, he brought with him
a rich style of science writing that emphasized an enchantment with
the universe. Helpfully, Buss grounds us in the ways that Ley learned
about science while he was a young man. His descriptions of Ley's
reading habitats, museum visits, and lecture attendance are
themselves astounding. Not since James A. Secord's _Victorian
Sensation: The Extraordinary Publication, Reception, and Secret
Authorship of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation _(2001) has
a historian given us such a close account of how an individual
interacted with science in their daily life. By focusing so closely
on Ley's interests, Buss offers a valuable window into the influences
on an influencer.

Buss's second argument concerns Ley's shifting identity as a writer.
As he notes in the introduction to the text, there is a surprising
lack of current literature about the people who shaped the public
understanding of science in the United States. Most of this
literature has been focused on antagonism between scientists and
media producers. Yet the story is a bit more complicated than that.
There were a number of positive collaborations between scientists and
cultural producers in the 1950s and 1960s, as David A. Kirby (_Lab
Coats in Hollywood: Science, Scientists, and Cinema _[2011]) has
shown. Indeed, as Buss points out, some individuals became expert
facilitators between scientists and media titans--and Ley was one of
these. While he lacked formal credentials, he was a skillful
storyteller and a gracious promoter, who worked to boost colleagues
like Wernher von Braun. By the time that Ley made it "big," he had
spent twenty years networking among public relations and publishing
teams. He achieved success because of his hard, tireless work
convincing his peers of his expertise as a science communicator.

Buss's third argument focuses on Ley's contribution to a genre of
science popularization in the 1950s and 1960s: books that promoted
science as a form of democratic expression. As Buss points out,
although this historiographical outlook makes historians cringe, many
science writers wrote books that intertwined scientific research and
democratic principles. At the same time, Buss tracks how popular
science writers like Ley eagerly wrote about the history of
science--until their optimistic texts eventually fell out of favor
with the general public and historians of science.

So, who was Ley? He wasn't a scientist or an engineer (per se) but a
starry-eyed romantic who helped a generation of baby boomers dream
about the stars. Ley was one of a group of movers and shakers who,
behind the scenes, created the visual metaphors of the Space Age. I
am grateful that Buss has written such a complete, detailed
biography. His nuanced perspective on Ley's role in the larger
science communication scene helps us understand how non-scientists
served important roles as communicators in the 1950s and 1960s. Ley's
lack of scientific credentials might have initially slowed him down
but did not stop him from eventually publishing hundreds of
influential articles that inspired other writers and scientists. For
proof of that influence, visit a used bookshop and pick up one of his
many excellent books, still wonderful to read decades later.

Citation: Ingrid Ockert. Review of Buss, Jared S., _Willy Ley:
Prophet of the Space Age_. H-Environment, H-Net Reviews. July, 2020.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=54728

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart
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