Silver Moon Race
The Silver Moon Race mirrors the historical competition to reach the Moon, from the initial impact of a human-made object on the lunar surface to the first crewed landing. It recounts a space-race narrative, not a terrestrial one: Soviet Luna missions, U.S. Surveyor and Apollo programs, and subsequent Chinese, Indian, Japanese, and U.S. commercial efforts each represent milestones in the endeavor to land spacecraft safely on the Moon. The course is the Moon itself, primarily its near side until China’s Chang’e 4 successfully reached the far side. The most significant event is Apollo 11, observed live by approximately 500 million viewers, succeeded by five additional crewed Apollo landings before human exploration ceased. The uncrewed missions are equally important: Luna 9 and Luna 13 transmitted the first images from the surface, Surveyor demonstrated U.S. soft-landing capabilities, and later missions resumed lunar landings after a considerable hiatus.