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Published 2018 152 pages, black & white and colour 3-D photographs, softcover with DVD
Published 2021 202 pages, black & white and colour 3-D photographs, softcover with DVD
Published 2006, 96 pages, black & white and colour photographs and illustrations, softcover, 4" x 7" inches
Published 2005, 96 pages, black & white and colour photographs and illustrations, softcover, 4" x 7" inches
Published 2005, black & white and colour photographs and illustrations, individual mission details, softcover, 4" x 7" inches
Published October 2018, 44 pages, softcover, 10" x 10" inches
New Edition Published 2012, 96 pages, black & white and colour photographs and illustrations, all mission crew photos and patches, astronaut list, softcover, 4" x 7" inches
Published 2019, 96 pages, black & white and colour photographs and illustrations, softcover, 4" x 7" inches
Published 2006, black & white and colour photographs and illustrations, individual mission details, softcover, 4" x 7" inches
Published September 2015, 336 pages, softcover 6" x 9" inches
Published November 2022, 480 pages, softcover, 5 " x 8" inches
NASA's John F. Kennedy Space Center set the stage for the American adventure into space and went on to host a succession of rocket launches that have helped to form our understanding of the nature of the universe.
Without the mighty Saturn V rocket, the Apollo 11 moon landing would not have been possible in July 1969. Even today, nearly fifty years later, it remains by far the largest and most powerful rocket ever used. Equipped with computers that are easily surpa
The moon landing remains the most astonishing and impressive accomplishment of manned space travel to this day. In July 1969, just eight years after President John F. Kennedy announced the bold plan, the first astronaut set foot on another celestial body.
Published August 2009, 232 pages, black & white photographs, bibliography, index, softcover, 6" x 9" inches
Published 2022, 192 pages, black & white photographs and illustrations, index,, softcover, 6" x 9" inches
Published 2020, 138 pages, over black & white photographs and diagrams, index, softcover, 6" x 9" inches
With the launch of the Sputnik 1 satellite on October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union started the space race; the race for the moon soon followed. Here too the USSR was ahead of the game: the first flyby of the moon, the first lunar-impact probe, the first pict
With the launch of the Sputnik 1 satellite on October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union started the space race; the race for the moon soon followed. Here too the USSR was ahead of the game: the first flyby of the moon, the first lunar-impact probe, the first pict
The journey into space is a dangerous one, and although some aspects of space travel seem to be routine it still takes humanity to the limits of what is technically possible. It is an environment that forgives no mistake, and where carelessness usually ha
This concise history is the first book in a new series on the Soviet space program, and features many rare photographs, diagrams, and charts. When Soviet rocket experts examined the first Nazi V-2s in early 1945, they immediately realized that their own t
Project Mercury was America's entry into the manned spaceflight program. When the program began in 1958, the Soviet Union was far ahead of the US in the race for supremacy in space. With immense effort, and in record time, NASA, the newly created spacefli
In just two-and-a-half years, beginning in 1964, two unmanned and ten manned flights took place in the Gemini program. This program was the turning point in the space race with the USSR; from then on the Americans took the lead.
Published 2005, 208 pages, black & white and photographs and 25 colour photographs and illustrations, softcover, 7" x 10" inches