A Girl's Guide To Missiles
- 352 pages
- 13 hours of reading
The China Lake missile range, about the size of the state of Delaware, is located in a huge stretch of the Mojave Desert. Created during World War II, it has always been shrouded in secrecy, though of course the people who make missiles and other weapons are regular working people, with domestic routines and everyday dilemmas. Four of them were Karen Piper's parents, her sister, and-- when she needed summer jobs-- herself. Her dad designed the Sidewinder, which was ultimately used catastrophically in Vietnam. When her mom got tired of being a stay-at-home mom, she went to work on the Tomahawk. Once, when a missile nose needed to be taken offsite for final testing, her mother loaded it into the trunk of the family car, and set off down a Los Angeles freeway. Traffic was heavy, so she stopped off at the mall, leaving the missile in the parking lot. Piper sketches in the belief systems-- from Amway's get-rich schemes to propaganda in The Rocketeer to evangelism, along with fears of a Lemurian takeover and Charles Manson-- that governed their lives. Her memoir is also a search for the truth of the past and what really brought her parents to China Lake with two young daughters, a story that reaches back to her father's World War II flights with contraband across Europe. Finally, it recounts the crossroads moment in a young woman's life when she finally found a way out of a culture of secrets and fear, and out of the desert
