Author Topic: Apollo in Photographs books  (Read 13986 times)

Offline Blackstar

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Apollo in Photographs books
« on: 08/29/2025 01:10 am »
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« Last Edit: 11/21/2025 07:32 am by jacqmans »

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #1 on: 08/29/2025 01:11 am »
« Last Edit: 09/04/2025 08:43 pm by Blackstar »

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #2 on: 10/02/2025 05:30 pm »



Online catdlr

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #3 on: 10/02/2025 05:55 pm »
PSA #3:  Paywall? View this video on how-to temporary Disable Java-Script: youtu.be/KvBv16tw-UM

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #4 on: 10/12/2025 04:18 pm »
They're doing an Apollo 8 book too.

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #5 on: 10/18/2025 06:35 pm »
Apollo 1 is October, Apollo 7 is November, and Apollo 8 is March 2026.

Offline saturnapollo

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #6 on: 10/18/2025 06:43 pm »
Excellent!

Keith

Offline Jim

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #7 on: 10/18/2025 09:42 pm »
Wouldn't a pay for view website have been easier?

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #8 on: 10/19/2025 12:10 am »
Wouldn't a pay for view website have been easier?

Books are better.

Offline Jim

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #9 on: 10/19/2025 04:01 pm »
Wouldn't a pay for view website have been easier?

Books are better.

But a book for every mission?

Online catdlr

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #10 on: 10/19/2025 04:10 pm »
Wouldn't a pay for view website have been easier?

Books are better.

But a book for every mission?


Yeah.  Can you imagine one book for every Shuttle mission?
PSA #3:  Paywall? View this video on how-to temporary Disable Java-Script: youtu.be/KvBv16tw-UM

Offline MattMason

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #11 on: 10/19/2025 04:16 pm »
Wouldn't a pay for view website have been easier?

Books are better.

But a book for every mission?


Yeah.  Can you imagine one book for every Shuttle mission?

A pleasantly excessive endeavour, that idea is.
While perhaps not all 135 missions would need a book, ones which flew the interplanetary spacecraft, had technical or personal firsts, and a summary of ISS assemblies would be nice.
I think the tragedies have enough books out there.
"Why is the logo on the side of a rocket so important?"
"So you can find the pieces." -Jim, the Steely Eyed

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #12 on: 10/19/2025 05:38 pm »
Wouldn't a pay for view website have been easier?

Books are better.

But a book for every mission?


Yeah.  Can you imagine one book for every Shuttle mission?

A pleasantly excessive endeavour, that idea is.
While perhaps not all 135 missions would need a book, ones which flew the interplanetary spacecraft, had technical or personal firsts, and a summary of ISS assemblies would be nice.
I think the tragedies have enough books out there.

That remark I made wasn't for real, just making a comparison to Jim's remark on the Apollo series.
PSA #3:  Paywall? View this video on how-to temporary Disable Java-Script: youtu.be/KvBv16tw-UM

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #13 on: 10/21/2025 03:19 am »
I think this is coming out in November:

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books
« Reply #14 on: 11/13/2025 07:26 pm »
Kluger's new book on Gemini was released this week. I'm awaiting my copy.

The author of the Apollo 1 and 7 books has announced plans for the next ones. I'll find the post, but I believe he announced Apollos 8, 10 and 11. He's probably also doing Apollo 9, although I need to check.


Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #15 on: 11/21/2025 03:57 am »
Apollo 8 in late February 2026.
« Last Edit: 11/21/2025 07:30 am by jacqmans »

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #16 on: 12/02/2025 07:16 pm »
The Apollo 1 and 7 books have come down in price on Amazon, $40 and $45.


Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #17 on: 12/04/2025 02:39 pm »
The Apollo 8 book has apparently been printed early and will be available this month (December) rather than February. I'll post the info from the author.


Update:

Retro Space Images
Received word from our publisher today that the Apollo 8 book in our series has arrived earlier than expected, and that the release date has been moved up to this month. The original release date was Feb 28, 2026. More details as I get them.
https://amzn.to/4ixam7i
Also available at these fine bookstores
Barnes and Noble:
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/.../apollo-8.../1148088714...
Bookshop.org:
https://bookshop.org/.../apollo-8-in.../b08234601364e7f6...
BAM!: books a million
https://www.booksamillion.com/.../J-L.../9780764370847


« Last Edit: 12/04/2025 06:50 pm by Blackstar »

Offline woods170

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #18 on: 12/04/2025 07:09 pm »
Wouldn't a pay for view website have been easier?

Stuff has a tendency to eventually disappear from the interwebs. Physical formats however, like books, have a tendency to last for a very long time, when stored properly.
Which is why we have an original 1865 first edition issue of Jules Verne's book "De la Terre à la Lune" (From the Earth to the Moon) in the NRM archives.
Somehow I don't see a "pay for view" website for "Apollo 1 in photographs" still existing 160 years from now...

But that's just me in my role as a spaceflight archivist...
« Last Edit: 12/04/2025 07:31 pm by woods170 »

Offline woods170

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #19 on: 12/04/2025 07:18 pm »
Wouldn't a pay for view website have been easier?

Books are better.

But a book for every mission?


Yeah.  Can you imagine one book for every Shuttle mission?

Not that I was ever a big fan of the shuttle, but I know a few people who would be like: "Bring it on!"
« Last Edit: 12/04/2025 07:30 pm by woods170 »

Offline woods170

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #20 on: 12/04/2025 07:28 pm »
Kluger's new book on Gemini was released this week. I'm awaiting my copy.

The author of the Apollo 1 and 7 books has announced plans for the next ones. I'll find the post, but I believe he announced Apollos 8, 10 and 11. He's probably also doing Apollo 9, although I need to check.

Ed Hengeveld is a well-known Dutch collector of spaceflight images, and he's a member of this forum as well btw. He's involved with this series of books (see his name on the cover of the Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books), and he recently wrote an article for the "Ruimtevaart" (spaceflight) magazine of the "Nederlandse Vereniging voor Ruimtevaart" (NVR - Dutch Spaceflight Society).

In that article he made it clear that the three of them (Pickering, Bisney and Hengeveld) intend to complete a series of twelve photo books (for Schiffer Publishing); one book for each of the crewed Apollo missions:
- Apollo 1 in photographs
- Apollo 7 in photographs
- Apollo 8 in photographs
- Apollo 9 in photographs
- Apollo 10 in photographs
- Apollo 11 in photographs
- Apollo 12 in photographs
- Apollo 13 in photographs
- Apollo 14 in photographs
- Apollo 15 in photographs
- Apollo 16 in photographs
- Apollo 17 in photographs

The first two of these have been in book stores since earlier this year and the third (Apollo 8 in photographs) is arriving in book stores this month.

Ed also reported that they have completed not just the Apollo 8 book, but the one for Apollo 9 as well. They are currently working on the Apollo 10 photo book. Their goal is to complete two of these Apollo photo books each year, wrapping up the series in 2030. Which btw should be just in time for humanities crewed return to the lunar surface (regardless of that being someone from China or the USA).

And the trio (Pickering, Bisney and Hengeveld) are even considering continueing this photobook format for the crewed Gemini and/or Skylab missions.
« Last Edit: 12/04/2025 07:38 pm by woods170 »

Offline Steve G

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #21 on: 12/05/2025 10:29 pm »
I just received the Apollo 7 book and it looks fantastic, though I have six defective pages where they have been printed twice, so they are superimposed with another page. I don't know the source of the TV still frames came from, but I've never seen videos of the TV transmissions close to that quality.

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #22 on: 12/06/2025 04:18 pm »
I just received the Apollo 7 book and it looks fantastic, though I have six defective pages where they have been printed twice, so they are superimposed with another page. I don't know the source of the TV still frames came from, but I've never seen videos of the TV transmissions close to that quality.

Thank you for that. Please post additional comments if you have them. I'm thinking about asking Santa for the books for Christmas.

Offline woods170

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #23 on: 12/08/2025 03:47 pm »
I just received the Apollo 7 book and it looks fantastic, though I have six defective pages where they have been printed twice, so they are superimposed with another page. I don't know the source of the TV still frames came from, but I've never seen videos of the TV transmissions close to that quality.

Thank you for that. Please post additional comments if you have them. I'm thinking about asking Santa for the books for Christmas.

OK, I'll oblige.

For the Apollo 1 book...

First impression: sturdy, decently-sized, well-bound hardcover photo book.

Physical dimensions (Metric... I don't care for that American or Imperial cr@p)
- Height: 28.7 cm
- Width: 22.5 cm
- Thickness: 2.8 cm (so, slightly over one 1 inch thick)
- Weight: 1.68 kg

Dust jacket: present and has the exact same print as the hardcover

Paper: heavy quality, glossy, extremely suitable for the many images in the book.

Text: Serif
Headers: Sans Serif

Number of images: well over 500

Images variety: the more publically known Apollo 1 images are there, but the real treasure of this book is that it contains a metric sh!t-ton of images that are rarely or never seen.

Text accompanying the images: generally well-researched and enjoyable to read. However, the text with a handful of images contains factual errors. That won't bother the general public, but nerds like me will notice them.

Print quality of images: very good. Pickering, Bisney and Hengeveld have taken great care to select the very best images and make sure the colors are correctly adjusted over the entire set. As is usual with Pickering, Bisney and Hengeveld, the images are free of blemishes, dust, scratches. They are well restored.

Most pages contain 2 images, with several containing 3 images. About 10 pages contain 1 image.

Contents:
- Foreword (1 page)
- Introduction (2 pages)
- Acknowledgements (1 page)
- Chapter 1 - The Astronauts (20 pages)
- Chapter 2 - January 1965-May 1966 (20 pages)
- Chapter 3 - June-July 1966 (16 pages)
- Chapter 4 - Launch Complex 34 (12 pages)
- Chapter 5 - August-September 1966 (32 pages)
- Chapter 6 - October 1966 (34 pages)
- Chapter 7 - November-December 1966 (14 pages)
- Chapter 8 - January 3-10, 1967 (20 pages)
- Chapter 9 - January 17, 1967 (18 pages)
- Chapter 10 - January 27-31, 1967 (24 pages)
- Chapter 11 - January 31 - July 1967 (36 pages)
- Epilogue (11 pages)
- Abbreviations (1 page)
- Bibliography (2 pages)
- Index (3 pages)

Total of 272 pages.

Overall:
I consider this book to be very good value for money. I spent 41 Euros (~ $47) on it at Dutch/Belgian online retailer bol.com
« Last Edit: 12/09/2025 07:49 am by woods170 »

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #24 on: 12/14/2025 10:22 pm »
Somebody just tweeted some pics from the Apollo 8 book:

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #25 on: 12/16/2025 05:53 pm »

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #26 on: 12/27/2025 07:50 pm »
I just got the Apollo 1 book from Santa, but have not spent any time going through it. I plan to do so. But I was surprised to see a bunch of photos of the funeral. I'm glad they included them.

As I have written before, so often photo editors use the same photos that have been used over and over again. If you pull out a dozen photo-heavy space books printed in the 1970s and 1980s, you will almost certainly see the same photos reprinted across several books. The same handful of photos from each mission. That's often because most photo editors know little about the subject, so they will look at previous books (not the original film positives) and say "I want this one, I want this other one..." Also, it's because, to be honest, the best photos are the ones that got printed first and reprinted. But that doesn't mean that those were the only good photos. It was not until the 1990s when a few people outside and inside NASA started looking at the original negatives that other images started showing up. And more recently some photo experts have been taking even some of the badly exposed originals and doing amazing things to bring out the details.


Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #27 on: 12/28/2025 07:03 pm »
Photos from the Apollo 8 book.

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #28 on: 01/04/2026 04:10 pm »

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #29 on: 01/08/2026 05:18 pm »
I have now acquired all three books, and although I have not done anything more than page through them in a few minutes, my preliminary assessment is that they're pretty amazing. There are all kinds of photos in there that not only have you not seen before, but you never even thought about before. For example, there are photos showing the assembly of the launch escape system. Lots of construction and astronaut training photos. It's an incredible collection.

Paper quality and photo reproduction quality are excellent.

I'm sure I'll comment more later. I hope that future books include more photos of hardware construction as well as things like recovery operations. They will certainly get a bit repetitive after awhile, but I think that the authors know the photographic material better than anybody. So they'll know what is out there.

Offline Blackstar

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #30 on: 01/12/2026 01:24 am »
I need to spend a lot more time going through these books. I briefly went through the Apollo 8 one yesterday and took photos of some random pages. You can see how many amazing photos there are of things you have never seen before--like the spacecraft being rolled out on a trailer, or the water deluge system being tested at the pad. They really are fantastic, and I'm somebody who is not easily impressed anymore.

Offline heng44

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #31 on: 01/17/2026 05:56 pm »
Ed Hengeveld here. Thanks for the positive words about our Apollo book series. Apollo 9 has been submitted to the publisher. Apollo 10 is done and working on Apollo 11 now (the EVA chapter).

I'd be interested to hear about any factual errors that were found. We set high standards, but even we don't know everything.

Offline woods170

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Re: Apollo in Photographs books
« Reply #32 on: Today at 10:46 am »
Ed Hengeveld here. Thanks for the positive words about our Apollo book series. Apollo 9 has been submitted to the publisher. Apollo 10 is done and working on Apollo 11 now (the EVA chapter).

I'd be interested to hear about any factual errors that were found. We set high standards, but even we don't know everything.

Great to hear that the Apollo 9 book is submitted to the publisher. I got my copy of the Apollo 8 book last week: it's as good as the previous Apollo 7 and Apollo 1 books. The only thing I noticed was that the Apollo 8 book came without a dust jacket (where the Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books came WITH a dust jacket - I don't know... maybe the distributor misplaced the dust jacket).

Anyway, like the Apollo 1 and Apollo 7 books I consider the Apollo 8 book to be great value for money. It's sturdy, solid, great quality paper, solid printing, solid colors, great selection of images (loads of them!) and well-researched text to go with each image. Very few factual errors (if I recall correctly I spotted only 3 factual errors in the first three books - on average only one per book).

There are also a few instances of "partial sentence repeats" in all three books. What do I mean by "partial sentence repeats"? Well something like this:

Quote from: woods170
A partial sentence repeat is a text editing error where a part of a sentence of a sentence is repeated within or immediately after the original sentence. after the original sentence. A fine example of this is shown in the two bolded sentence parts in this quote block.
« Last Edit: Today at 10:47 am by woods170 »

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