To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the 20th century's greatest flight achievement, this book chronicles how 400,000 men and women across the US worked to transport human beings across a quarter million miles of hostile space to an unexplored world, and how they ensured that the seven million engineered parts invented to fly this single mission all worked perfectly. The first Moon landing in July 1969 captured the world's imagination like no other space event before or after. Now, a half century later, the Owners' Workshop Manual series presents
a fascinating insight into this unparalleled mission, from the raw, fire-breathing power of the mighty Saturn V rocket to the individual stitching on a pressure-suit glove. You'll also find a new look at
the legacy of Apollo 11, how the Apollo missions inspired Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos to think big and create the current SpaceX and Blue Origin programs, and a look forward to
future manned Moon missions and deep-space exploration.
The
engaging, insightful text, accompanied by
remarkable photos and
technical images, bring arguably the greatest-ever feat of engineering and human endeavor to life.
"NASA Mission AS-506 Apollo 11 1969 is a pleasure to read and an education in design as well as project management. It could be as easily used to teach a college course as well as children since the writing by the authors is able to connect across that broad spectrum. The story of getting there, and back, has not been told better or with more understanding..."
- SeattlePi.com---
"......unreservedly recommended for personal, community, and academic library collections." - Midwest Book Review---
"...a richly detailed and illustrated, dramatically written chronicle..." - Journal Inquirer---