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・ The Man who Put the Germ in Germany
・ The Man Who Quit Smoking
・ The Man Who Returned to Life
・ The Man Who Rocked the Earth
・ The Man Who Saved Christmas
・ The Man Who Saved the World
・ The Man Who Saw Tomorrow
・ The Man Who Saw Tomorrow (1922 film)
・ The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
・ The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (stage play)
・ The Man Who Skied Down Everest
・ The Man Who Sleeps
・ The Man Who Smiled
・ The Man Who Smiles
・ The Man Who Sold Himself
The Man Who Sold the Moon
・ The Man Who Sold the Moon (short story collection)
・ The Man Who Sold the World
・ The Man Who Sold the World (album)
・ The Man Who Stayed at Home
・ The Man Who Stepped into Yesterday
・ The Man Who Sued God
・ The Man Who Talked Too Much
・ The Man Who Tasted Shapes
・ The Man Who Thought Life
・ The Man Who Told Everything
・ The Man Who Traveled in Elephants
・ The Man Who Turned Into A Stick
・ The Man Who Turned to Stone
・ The Man Who Understood Women


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The Man Who Sold the Moon : ウィキペディア英語版
The Man Who Sold the Moon

''The Man Who Sold the Moon'' is a science fiction novella by Robert A. Heinlein written in 1949 and published in 1951. A part of his ''Future History'' and prequel to "Requiem", it covers events around a fictional first Moon landing, in 1978, and the schemes of Delos D. Harriman, a businessman who is determined to personally reach and control the Moon.
==Plot==
Delos David Harriman, "the last of the Robber Barons", is obsessed with being the first to travel to—and possess—the moon. He asks his business partner, George Strong, and other tycoons to invest in the venture. Most dismiss Harriman's plans as foolhardy: Nuclear rocket fuel is scarce as the space station that produces it blew up, also destroying the only existing spaceship. The necessary technology for a chemical-fueled rocket stretches the boundaries of current engineering. The endeavor is both incredibly costly and of uncertain profitability. One skeptic offers to sell "all of my interest in the Moon...for fifty cents"; Harriman accepts and tries to buy the other associates' interests as well. Strong and two others agree to back his plans.
The technical problems are solvable with money and talent. To solve the tougher financial problems, Harriman exploits commercial and political rivalries. He implies to the Moka-Coka company, for example, that rival soft drink maker 6+ plans to turn the Moon into a massive billboard, using a rocket to scatter black dust on the surface in patterns. To an anti-Communist associate, he suggests that the Russians may print the hammer and sickle across the face of the Moon if they get to it first. To a television network, he offers the Moon as a reliable and uncensorable broadcasting station.
Harriman seeks to avoid government ownership of the Moon. As it passes directly overhead only in a narrow band north and south of the equator, he uses a legal principle that states that property rights extend to infinity above a land parcel. On that basis, Mexico, Central and parts of South America, and other countries in those latitudes around the world, have a claim on the Moon. The United States also has a claim due to Florida and Texas. By arranging for many countries to assert their rights Harriman persuades the United Nations to, as a compromise, assign management of the Moon to his company.
Money remains the main difficulty. Harriman liquidates his assets, risks bankruptcy, damages his marriage, and raises funds in numerous legitimate and semi-legitimate ways; "I", he says, "would cheat, lie, steal, beg, bribedo ''anything'' to accomplish what we have accomplished". Children donate money for a promise of all contributors' names engraved on a plaque left on the Moon. The names, however, will be microscopic in size. Harriman sells land and naming rights to craters, and plans to sell postal covers canceled on the Moon to collectors. He starts rumors that diamonds exist in moondust, intending to secretly place gems in the rocket to convince people that the rumors are true. Harriman will strenuously deny that the diamonds are from the Moon, being merely part of a scientific experiment; he expects people not to believe him, but he will not be guilty of actual fraud.
Harriman wants to be on the first flight of the ''Pioneer'' but the ship only has room for one pilot, Leslie LeCroix. The multistage rocket launches from Peterson Field, near Colorado Springs, Colorado, lands on the Moon, and returns to Earth. Harriman is the first to open the rocket's hatch; the canceled postal covers were left behind to save weight and he needs to get them aboard surreptitiously. While doing so, he asks LeCroix for the "lunar" diamonds. The pilot complies, then produces real lunar diamonds as well.
As Harriman predicted, once the first flight succeeds, many seek to invest in his venture to make more flights using a catapult launcher built on Pikes Peak. The next flight will begin a lunar colony. Harriman intends to be on the ship, but the majority owners of the venture object to his presence on the flight; he is too valuable to the company to risk in space. The rocket leaves without Harriman, who "looks as Moses must have looked, when he gazed out over the promised land."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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