“[This book] offer a fascinating reevaluation of space history from European perspectives. … I consider these books in the wider context of scholarship on Europe and space, asking how the concept of astroculture adds to these literatures as well as what limits it might hold.” (Benjamin W. Goossen, Contemporary European History, June 17, 2022)“The scholarship is generally good, and the case studies are well chosen … . this volume also celebrates the paradoxes of the 1970s, when idealism, power politics, and commercial savvy were seamlessly connected.” (David Baneke, Isis, Vol. 110 (3), September, 2019)“This ambitious publication program opens up new vistas in the cultural history of the space age, moving outward from accounts that prioritize the rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union. … This is a book worth reading and rereading, depending upon your interests. It convinces that our understanding of the ways in which the brief, forceful projection of human beings into outer space matters has often been too limited. Limiting Outer Space … is a powerful re-survey of territory that might seem over-explored.” (De Witt Douglas Kilgore, Science Fiction Studies, Vol. 46 (3), November, 2019)“An excellent collection of essays which encompasses a wide sweep of the impact of space research and space dreams on the cultural landscape of society as a whole, beyond the limiting technological confines within which the enterprise is usually examined. … The entire book is a thoroughly worthwhile thought-provoking read.” (Barry Kent, The Observatory, Vol. 139 (1270), June, 2019)