The Conquest of Space
The Conquest of Space is a 1949 speculative science book written by Willy Ley and illustrated by Chesley Bonestell. The book contains a portfolio of paintings by Bonestell depicting the possible future exploration of the Solar System, with explanatory text by Ley.
Author | Willy Ley |
---|---|
Illustrator | Chesley Bonestell |
Genre | Speculative science |
Of the 58 illustrations by Bonestell in Conquest, most had been published previously, in color, in magazines.[1]
Influences on fiction
- Some of Bonestell's designs inspired the look of George Pal's 1955 science fiction movie Conquest of Space, which also takes its title from the book, but uses it as a framework on which to hang a melodramatic plot.
- Bonestell's illustrations of the Moon in The Conquest of Space were used by Hergé as a basis for his illustrations of the lunar surface in his 1952-53 The Adventures of Tintin comic, Explorers on the Moon.[2]
- Arthur C. Clarke was also an admirer of The Conquest of Space; in his novel 2001: A Space Odyssey, Clarke refers to Saturn's moon Iapetus as "Japetus" due to that being the spelling used by Ley in The Conquest of Space.[3]
- Larry Niven's 1967 short story "The Soft Weapon" is set on a planet around Beta Lyrae; Niven's description of Beta Lyrae is actually a meticulous retelling of the details of Bonestell's painting rather than any kind of portrayal of the Beta Lyrae system itself, which is now understood to look quite different.[4]
References
Notes
- "Bonestell Color Illustrations Index." collectspace.com. Retrieved: January 14, 2015.
- A comic book, the Cold War, and the Moon
- Arthur C. Clarke, The Lost Worlds of 2001, pg. 127.
- Niven, Larry (1968). Neutron Star. New York: Ballantine Books. p. 75.
Bibliography
- Ley, Willy. The Conquest of Space. New York: Viking, 1949. Pre-ISBN era.
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