29/07/2018
As with the first book, Flight of the Reindeer II will include testimony from people famous and/or expert. In one section, the great and very famous astronaut James A. Lovell figures prominently, as we see here:
He is famously the hero of Apollo 13, the space mission that was to land on the moon but that encountered critical trouble and needed Jim Lovell’s piloting skills and innate courage to bring it home. Many of us have seen the movie. Earlier, in late December of 1968, Lovell was one of three astronauts aboard Apollo 8, a mission that went ’round the moon just as planned. These men on Apollo 8 were the first-ever to fly beyond a low Earth orbit, the first to see the far side of the moon, and the first to see Earth as a whole planet. Astronaut William Anders’s “Earthrise” photo, which is rendered on the cover of our book and also seen on this page, has been called the most important environmental picture of all time. It shows Earth in its isolation, its smallness, its fragility.
It was made by Anders on Christmas Eve. By his side in the space capsule was Jim Lovell, and Lovell later said about his feelings: “The vast loneliness is awe-inspiring and it makes you realize what you have back there on Earth.”
Now we have more from the communication between Lovell and Mission Control in Houston on December 24, 1968. What follows is a somewhat cryptic exchange, an exchange that tantalizes still today.
089:32:50 Mission Control: Apollo 8, Houston. [No answer]
089:33:38 Mission Control: Apollo 8, Houston.
089:34:16 Lovell: Houston, Apollo 8, over.
089:34:19 Mission Control: Hello, Apollo 8. Loud and clear.
089:34:25 Lovell: Roger. Please be informed there is a Santa Claus.
089:34:31 Mission Control: That's affirmative. You're the best ones to know.
Instructions continued from there, and Apollo 8 eventually finished its triumphant mission and returned to Earth on December 27, splashing down in the Pacific Ocean south of Hawaii. The crew of Apollo 8 was then named Time magazine’s 1968 Men of the Year, and they were celebrated at the 1969 Super Bowl.
Now, why would Lovell have bothered to say such a thing about the Great Elf in the critical moment? Why the information about Santa? What had he seen? What moved him?
In the years since, there have of course been conspiracy theories about UFOs or other alien presences in the space between Earth and the moon. Lovell has been doubted, even scoffed at for his Santa comment. But the astronaut, a Captain in the U.S. Navy and a man of great probity, seemed so businesslike and certain and on-the-record. And today, he sticks by his observation . . . .