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The Brick Moon

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of a sphere, 200 feet in diameter, built of bricks. The device is intended as a navigational aid, but is launched accidentally with people aboard. They survive, and so the story also provides the first known fictional description of a
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a space station built in "The Gap" (where the Earth is missing) is named "the Brick Moon". It appears in two of the novels:
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in 1869. A fourth part or sequel, entitled "Life on the Brick Moon", was also published in
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discovered the two moons of Mars. He wrote to Hale, comparing the smaller Martian moon,
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containing the first known fictional description of an artificial
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in 1870. It was collected as the title work in Hale's anthology
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The Complete Book of Spaceflight: From Apollo 1 to Zero Gravity
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This article about an 1860s science fiction novel is a
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The Brick Moon and Other Stories by Edward Everett Hale
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Works originally published in The Atlantic (magazine)
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Communication Via Satellite: A Vision in Retrospect
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Index

Short story
Edward Everett Hale

Text available
Wikisource
Science fiction
The Atlantic Monthly
Magazine
novella
Edward Everett Hale
The Atlantic Monthly
speculative fiction
satellite
Newton's cannonball
natural satellites
orbit
space station
GPS
The Atlantic Monthly
Asaph Hall
Deimos
Long Earth series
Terry Pratchett
Stephen Baxter
The Long War
The Long Mars


"Strange Forgotten Space Station Concepts That Never Flew"

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