I’ve always been fascinated by the space race of the 1960s. The sheer audacity of it. The question of why we haven’t been back to the Moon in over half a century. The way the dream of routine space travel seemed tantalizingly close in the 1980s—only to fade toward the turn of the millennium—before being reignited by the Mars missions, the landing of Curiosity, and eventually the rise of private space companies like SpaceX and Rocket Lab.
It’s a strange and exciting time to be alive.
But to understand where we are now, it helps to revisit where it all began. And that’s where John Strausbaugh’s The Wrong Stuff comes in.
The Soviet Story We Didn’t Grow Up With
Most Western narratives of the space race are, unsurprisingly, American. Mercury. Gemini. Apollo. The triumph of Apollo 11. Neil Armstrong. “One small step.”
But The Wrong Stuff flips the lens. Strausbaugh tells the story of the space race primarily from the Soviet side, and in doing so, he brings to life a world that feels both alien and uncomfortably recent.
The Soviet program achieved staggering firsts:
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First satellite: Sputnik 1
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First human in space: Yuri Gagarin
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First woman in space: Valentina Tereshkova
For a time, it genuinely looked like the Soviet Union might dominate space.
What makes Strausbaugh’s account so gripping is not just the achievements, but the chaos behind them.
Risk, Ingenuity, and Sheer Nerve
The Soviet engineers and cosmonauts operated under conditions that are difficult to comprehend today. Resources were scarce. Infrastructure was crude. Political pressure was relentless. Failure wasn’t just embarrassing—it could be career-ending or worse.
And yet, the ingenuity on display is astonishing. Improvised solutions. Wild experimentation. Rockets built and tested at breakneck speed. The stereotype of the “Russian crazy genius” feels less like caricature and more like description. There’s a sense that they were constantly pushing forward on a mixture of brilliance, desperation, and sometimes pure luck.
In several instances, survival itself seems almost miraculous. Catastrophic design flaws. Exploding prototypes. Near-fatal missions. And still—they kept going.
Reading this, I couldn’t help but reflect on how different that mindset was from the one many of us grew up with in the West during the relatively peaceful and prosperous decades after the Cold War. For those of us raised in the 1980s and 1990s, the existential tension of mutually assured destruction was background noise at most. We inherited the afterglow of victory and stability.
The people driving the space race did not have that luxury. They operated under the constant shadow of nuclear annihilation and ideological struggle. That pressure shaped everything.
Paranoia and the Gulag in the Background
Perhaps the most chilling aspect of the Soviet side is the paranoia. Leadership changes could upend entire programs overnight. Political favor was as important as technical competence. Engineers and designers worked not only against physics, but against a system in which failure might mean exile—or worse.
It’s difficult to imagine living in a society where a failed launch might carry consequences far beyond budget cuts. Strausbaugh captures that tension well: the sense that the space program was both a scientific endeavor and a high-stakes political gamble.
The Dangerous Business of Rocket Fuel
One of the unexpected outcomes of reading The Wrong Stuff was that it led me to pick up Ignition!: An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants by John Drury Clark. Strausbaugh’s descriptions of the explosive, toxic, and often barely controllable rocket propellants used during the era were too fascinating not to explore further.
The chemistry alone reads like something out of science fiction—hypergolic fuels that ignite on contact, corrosive substances that dissolve equipment (and sometimes people), and an arms race not just in rockets but in the terrifying liquids that powered them.
Why We Haven’t Been Back
The book inevitably circles back to the larger question: why haven’t we returned to the Moon in the same way? The answer seems less technological than psychological and political. The space race was fueled by existential competition. Once that competition faded, so did the urgency—and the budgets.
The dream of space travel didn’t die overnight. It lingered. It flickered. In the 1980s, it still felt as if space stations, lunar bases, and Mars missions were just around the corner. Then came decades of incrementalism.
Only recently—with Mars rovers, reusable rockets, and the bold ambitions of private companies—does it feel like that old fire is truly reigniting.
A Different World
What The Wrong Stuff ultimately underscores is how difficult it is for those of us who grew up in more stable times to fully grasp the mindset of the Cold War. The willingness to take enormous risks. The acceptance of danger as routine. The fusion of ideology, prestige, and survival.
It was a world defined by grand conflict and ever-present threat. That pressure created extraordinary achievements—but at immense cost.
Final Thoughts
The Wrong Stuff was, without question, one of the best books I read last year. It brought the space race vividly to life—particularly the Soviet side, which remains less familiar in the West and, in many ways, more dramatic.
If you’re fascinated by space exploration, Cold War history, or the psychology of high-stakes competition, this book is well worth your time. It doesn’t just recount events; it immerses you in an era when the future of humanity seemed to hinge on who could reach the stars first—and at what price.