![]() This is a funny-looking self-published book: 150 pages of handwritten text and diagrams. Sky to Space: Astronomy beyond the Basics, by Steve Fentress I learned a trick from people with dyslexia that helps a lot to read wide text blocks: use a ruler to cover up lower lines of text and "underline" the line I'm reading. My only issue with this book is that lines of text stretch as wide across the page as the panoramas, making it difficult to read. For four of the missions, living Apollo astronauts contributed their remarks on what they saw in some of the panoramas. As Apollo 16 lunar module pilot Charlie Duke remarks in the foreword, the slow transition of flat terrain at the Apollo 11 site to the mountainous Taurus Littrow valley of Apollo 17 shows the increasing confidence of mission planners. Turning page after page of gray Moon and black sky takes the reader to the lunar surface, in the boots of the astronauts. ![]() ![]() They're presented in order, with brief but informative overviews of each successful mission. Each panorama was lovingly assembled from about 20 individual Hasselblad frames by author Mike Constantine. It's a great introduction to the Apollo missions, presented in a unique way: margin-to-margin panoramas shot by the astronauts on the lunar surface. ![]() There's been no Apollo book like this before. ![]()
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