Foreword by Fred Haise
Preface
Acknowledgments
History of Apollo
"…The Eagle has landed"
Steve Bales
Bruce McCandless
Richard Underwood
Clancy Hatleberg
"We're not the Soviets"
Julian Scheer
Joseph Laitin
Hugh Brown
"Thunder at the Cape"
JoAnn Morgan
Joe Schmitt
Jack King
"Marriage, Missions, and Moon Cars"
Joan Roosa
Rodney Rose
Gerry Griffin
Sonny Morea
U.S. Manned Missions Summary
Glossary
"This book is 'new news' to all those who followed Apollo- including me. It not only captures the sense of team spirit and a desire to assure success, but it really brings out the human interest side of the program and highlights the contributions of those removed from the 'firing line.' It's a winner!" -- Fred Haise, Apollo 13 astronaut "Open up the pages of Watkins' in depth view of the unsung heroes of the Apollo mission, and you will get a clear idea of why the Apollo Program was so successful. Meet the people behind the scenes of our journey to the moon as Billy Watkins magnificently portrays the human dedication of many people to achieve man's greatest adventure." -- Jim Lovell, Apollo astronaut "Every story has a heart and a soul, and Billy Watkins hands these rich gifts to the reader with respect and perspective." -- Lynne Russell, Former CNN Headline News anchor and award-winning journalist "I met Billy just prior to the Columbia tragedy. After one conversation I realized that this was not your typical 'hometown' reporter but someone that could ask me questions regarding Human Spaceflight 3 or 4 layers deep and from a historical sense knew more about NASA's accomplishments than I did. Over the years, Billy has become a trusted personal friend and someone I trust to tell the personal side of this highly technical business. I am sure you will enjoy this historical account of the Apollo era." -- Bill Parsons, NASA shuttle program manager "Watkins flows each biography into the next with subtle skill, making Heroes less like a collection of disjointed stories but rather that of the team they were. If there is only one regret, it is that Watkins stopped at 14. After reading Apollo Moon Missions,The Unsung Heroes you'll realize how little we all know about those who made the small steps and giants leap possible." -- Robert Pearlman, CollectSpace.com, Member of the U.S. Space Walk of Fame Foundation Board of Directors
Billy Watkins a lifelong Mississippian, has been a newspaper reporter for three decades in his home state, telling the stories of its people. After earning a journalism degree from the University of Mississippi, he was a sportswriter from 1975 to 1990 at The Meridian Star, Jackson Daily News and the Jackson Clarion-Ledger. He was voted by his peers the state's Sportswriter of the Year three times. He then moved to general features at the Clarion-Ledger, where his work has earned him more than 40 regional and national awards. He proudly reminds people that the Saturn V rockets, which powered our astronauts on their way to the moon, were all tested in Mississippi, at Stennis Space Center.
Project Apollo was one of the greatest achievements of the 20th
century. In the 1960s, the US developed its space program from
suborbital flights to lunar missions. Much has been written about
the astronauts, flight directors, and other high-level officials
who were instrumental in the Apollo program, but this book focuses
on others at lower levels who played important roles in the
successes of Apollo. For instance, guidance officer Steve Bales
made a critical call during Apollo 11, the first manned lunar
landing. As the lunar module descended, several alarms sounded, but
Bales decided within seconds that these were due to computer data
overloads and that it was safe to continue the landing. The images
from Apollo were stunning; Richard Underwood was the NASA chief of
photography who trained the astronauts in this important skill.
Others featured include members of the Navy recovery team, public
affairs officials, telemetry and communications technicians, and
the designer of the Lunar Rover, among others….Recommended. General
readers.
*Choice*
Journalist Watkins takes advantage of decades of close attention as
he recounts the stories of some of the thousands of men and women
who made getting to the moon their daily work and uncanny passion.
He includes the story of a publicist who lobbied for a television
camera on Apollo 11, without which we would not have seen Neil
Armstrong take that step, specialists on signal-jamming USSR
submarines and lightening, and the lucky folks who got to design
the Moon Rover. It is clear Watkins would like to acknowledge the
efforts of all (picking just 14 must have been agonizing) but those
appearing here are truly representative of a breed of scientist and
engineer, whose pie-in-the-sky thinking actually worked.
*SciTech Book News*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |