Blue Sky Dream: A Memoir of AMERICAN (AMERI)ca's Fall from Grace

  Author:    David Beers
  ISBN:    015600531X
  Sales Rank:    738321
  Published:    1997-09-15
  Publisher:    Harvest Books
  # Pages:    288
  Binding:    Paperback
  Avg. Rating:    4.0 based on 8 reviews
  Used Offers:    30 from $2.69
  Amazon Price:    $13.00
  (Data above last updated:  2008-11-04 09:47:15 EST)
  
  
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Blue Sky Dream: A Memoir of AMERICAN (AMERI)ca's Fall from Grace
  
BeerÂ's “important...fascinating” book(Los Angeles Times) shows how suburban California came to epitomize the american Dream-until its affluent complacency was shattered by downsizing, anxiety, and distrust.
In this affecting memoir of his childhood in a "blue sky" family--the aerospace community of California, specifically those working for Lockheed--David Beers mourns the passing of an era of limitless possibility and exploding prosperity. Combining poignant family reminiscence, interviews, and brief essays on culture and technology, this book paints a convincing and elegiac portrait of life in 1950s and 1960s America. Beers's father, Hal, a former aviator turned Lockheed engineer, is at the center of the book, and the author's deep ambivalence toward him mirrors his ambivalence toward the values surrounding his "blue sky" upbringing.
                  Reader Reviews 1 - 7 of 7                 
  
  
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03-09-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Blue Sky Dream 21st Century Re-Do
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Blue Sky [Tribe] Team
The American Dream as described in David Beer's book was fueled by the Cold War under a banner of self-preservation over economy. As the Cold War ended the Blue Sky Dream ended and the Blue Sky Tribes as described by Mr. Beer were dispersed like the Native Americans of the mid-to-late 1800s. The Blue Sky Tribe's migration from California was like a virtual Trail of Tears. Unfortunately 9/11 and the war on terror has brought on a rebirth - a new dream with the same mantra of self-preservation. Just as the orchards of northern California gave way to the manicured subdivisions of the Blue Sky Tribes , places like Tucson, Arizona have seen their natural desert vegetation surrender to planned communities of the new Global Teams with a distinct California flavor. Mr. Beer's eulogy portends the future of the new Global Team environment of the twenty first century. Until we has human beings throughout the world learn to live with each other, our American culture will continue to cycle through eras of self-preservation and the ironic emptiness that it leaves us with.
Mr. Beer does an excellent job of portraying the subtle but extensive impact on our traditions of a self-preservation society. All new entrants into this lifestyle should read this book and reflect on its message. If you are not vigilant your time will come.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-04 09:50:19 EST)
11-19-07 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Out of the blue
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A remembrance both personal and political of the boom-boom aerospace era and its offspring, Beers' story is that of a pilot and an industry, a father and a son. The book grew out of an article, "The Crash of Blue Sky California," which appeared in Harper's and won Beers a National Magazine Award in 1993. Those of us who lived in or near the instant communities fueled by Federal dollars funneled to Cape Kennedy, Huntsville, Houston, Silicon Valley, Boston and other military-industrial-electronic centers can instantly connect to Beers' childhood home. But even from a further remove, his insight into the drive behind our post-war militarism and the rippling effects throughout the country will ring true. From Sputnik to Star Wars to Apple Computer's curious origins to simulated flight games in the multi-megahertz 90s, this work covers the rise and fall of an attitude and an era. And it does so in the context of painful personal experience and the difficulty and joy of finally growing up. This one will definitely make you think.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-03-19 02:30:45 EST)
06-04-07 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Amazing.
Reviewer Permalink
This book is amazing. There is a belief that if we just work hard enough, all come together and contribute the right little pieces, we can make everything good, without changing ourselves. This book is an examination of that mythology. In the end it was fear that fed it. The idols, sputnik, Apollo, were false, designed to give the nation(s) something to believe in besides fear. In the end it may be story of how we came to find that massive technology, and massive coordinated efforts were not the answer.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-11-20 09:55:00 EST)
01-09-07 2 0\4
(Hide Review...)  Blame dad
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The author definitely has some issues with his father. It's always easiest to blame the parents. Although well organized, it's still a pretty cheap piece of whining.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-09 03:44:03 EST)
08-02-06 5 0\1
(Hide Review...)  Once thre was a Nation
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On reading "Blue Sky Dream" I am reminded that once there was a nation that thought it could do anything-There still is: ISS-International Space Station.

John R. Aubrun
Spacecraft Engineer
International Space Station Project
Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-09 03:44:03 EST)
08-02-04 4 4\5
(Hide Review...)  Blue Sky or Rust Belt, it happened to us all....
Reviewer Permalink
I bought this book because I heard that it was about the decline of the aerospace industry in California and how it affected the family of one engineer. This attracted me first of all because my lifetime dream had always been to work in aerospace, preferably in California. The second reason was that I had never achieved this dream and I wanted some indication that it wasn't all that it was cracked up to be- sour grapes on my part. I came away with conflicted opinions. Deep down I didn't want that "Blue Sky Dream" to be over, to be less than my dream. I recognized my own early upbringing in the tale- the worship of Von Braun, the Chesley Bonestell art, the model planes, Tom Swift books, the electronic kits and erector sets, Lost in Space- all of it. Yet, the overall experience was not exactly nostalgia, or if it was, it was a bitter nostalgia.

The author does an extremely good job of capturing the feelings of the time. I knew exactly what he was talking about. The experiences with the wide open, empty world of the new subdivision was mine (though ours was in a former cornfield and not an orchard.) Also, when things began to turn sour and he realized that paradise wasn't all it was cracked up to be I knew exactly what he was describing. However, perhaps because I'm a little older I also identified with his engineer father. While I never made it into aerospace I did make it into less glamorous engineering projects in equally less glamorous surroundings. You see, the rust belt experience is in many ways similar to that of the blue sky belt- but it hit us earlier and harder. My parents lost that suburban ranch. There were no huge government interventions to buy us time; in fact the government siphoned resources out of the rust belt to build the blue sky belt- continously. To be fair, the author does point this out.

I found the book on the whole to be satisfying- if not optimistic. I recognized the ring of truth here. I also recognized the problems that he was describing, especially the sell-out of engineers and workers by a management with no drive or imagination. He is correct in why there was no peace dividend and no retooling of industry into useful peacetime production. It never happened. Moreover, we are now all freelancers with no security, no benefits, no guidance, and no inspiration.

The book is not totally without hope however. The deep, almost mystic, faith of the author's mother speaks to that. That's the remarkable thing about my experience reading this book, for I saw myself in the experiences and attitudes of the father, the son, and the mother at different stages of my own life. Unlike the author I do not see the inherent incompatibility of science on the one hand and mystic faith on the other. You just have to decide what represents a higher reality, and what represents a lower, you just have to get your priorities straight. Maybe one day the whole country will get its priorities straight too.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-09 03:44:03 EST)
02-29-00 5 7\9
(Hide Review...)  A similar life
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While my dad worked in a steel mill in western Pa. this is my story too. It is the story of growing up, Catholic, in the 60's & 70's in a small town. The Lost in Space chapter is fun, since I collect LIS toys now.The author was shooting higher than this, but it hit me emotionally at a lower level. I enjoyed the book, and have re-read it many times.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-09 03:44:03 EST)
  
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