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Neil Armstrong: A Life of Flight Hardcover – July 8, 2014


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books; First Edition edition (July 8, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 125004071X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1250040718
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.5 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #34,610 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Though a famous, much chronicled astronaut, Neil Armstrong wanted to write his own story with the help of NBC reporter Barbree, who’d covered every one of his missions. But Armstrong, who died in 2012, was such a self-effacing man, he couldn’t bring himself to write a book focusing on him alone. He’d talked to Barbree for years about the chief passions of his life, flying and his family. Drawing on those long talks and with the cooperation of Armstrong’s family, Barbree offers an intimate portrait of a man grateful to have spent his life doing what he loved. Armstrong talked to Barbree about his two marriages, the death of his baby daughter, the close fellowship among pilots and astronauts, and the astonishing experiences of his space exploration missions. Timed to coincide with the forty-fifth anniversary of the Apollo 11 space launch, Barbree’s book includes many never-before-seen photos, a look back at the competition to win the space race with the Soviets, and Armstrong’s vision for the future of space exploration. --Vanessa Bush

Review

Praise for Neil Armstrong: A Life of Flight

"Much of Barbree’s writing has a “you are there” immediacy, because he was present for many of the book’s key events. During his more than half-century as space correspondent for NBC News, Barbree witnessed and reported on each and every launch of the U.S. human space program. He is at his best when describing the visceral thrill of rocket flight, the lifeless majesty of the moon, and the visual splendor of Earth from space. These poetic passages are made all the more poignant by his close brush with becoming an astronaut, as a finalist in NASA’s failed-to-launch “Journalist in Space” program."

- The Washington Post

“Barbree's book reminds readers of all that led up to that first step.”

- Associated Press

 

“Sit back, put up your feet, and spend some time with Neil Armstrong: A Life of Flight, by Jay Barbree, NBC’s longtime space correspondent, who has covered the US manned spaceflight program for more than half a century. To be sure, this is not the definitive, footnote-packed Armstrong biography. Instead, this book has the feel of sitting down with Barbree at a barbeque for an extended conversation.”
Christian Science Monitor: 1of the 10 Best Books of July

“NBC News space reporter Jay Barbree spent 50 years getting to know astronaut Neil Armstrong. In this biography, Barbree recalls Armstrong’s historic moon landing in gripping detail.”
Parade: included in Summer Books round-up

 

“His richly detailed profile of Armstrong…covers Armstrong’s life and career with intimacy, humor and heart, from his days as a U.S. Navy pilot through his training for the NASA space program, and ultimately into the commander’s seat of Apollo 11. Space hounds and history buffs will dig it, for sure, but even casual readers will be riveted by its comprehensive portrait of a real-life cosmic cowboy who broke the bonds of Earth and put the first American footprint where it had never been before.”

- American Profile

 

“With a foreword by John Glenn NBC News space correspondent Barbree got very up-close to the former Navy combat pilot and astronaut, who died in 2012. Notoriously private, Armstrong opened up to the author to reveal his innermost thoughts, telling “what he really felt when he took that first step on the moon, and what life in NASA was like.”

- VFW Magazine

 

“Barbree’s tone is warm, and he has a boyish enthusiasm for both tricky missions carried out deftly and for near misses barely avoided, both of which figure heavily in Armstrong’s professional life.”
- The Columbus Dispatch


"...intimate and definitive...a celebration of Armstrong's life and times."

- Fort Worth Star-Telegram

 

“An eye-opening and entertaining tale of the race to the moon.”
Publishers Weekly


 “Veteran news correspondent Barbree offers an intimate view into the life of Neil Armstrong (1930-2012), his friend as well as a national hero and very private person. The author paints a detailed and colorful picture of his subject and an unbiased depiction of the period in which he lived, while also demonstrating reverence for Armstrong as confidant.”
Library Journal, starred review


 “A wholly admiring assessment of Armstrong the aviator and Armstrong the man.”
- Kirkus Reviews


 “Emerging clearly in Barbree’s narrative are Armstrong’s humility and integrity – bedrock values that remained with him throughout his life.”
Aerospace America

 

"This is a great book and does much to preserve Neil's legacy."

- Jim Lovell, NASA astronaut and commander of Apollo 13 mission

 

"You'll find the Neil Armstrong I knew in these pages."

- Gene Cernan, NASA astronaut and the last man on the moon

Customer Reviews

Jay Barbree did a great job of personalizing a world famous man.
electrobob
If you're interested in an insider's perspective of the race for space, read this book.
Anne
Although there are many interesting technical details in this book.
Valerie R

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful By Sussex on August 28, 2014
Format: Hardcover
This is an odd book. It's not really a biography since it only starts in detail when Armstrong bales out in Korea and the author employs some of the devices of the novelist as well as the historian. Secondly, it is more of a re-telling of the early US manned space program than just a book about Armstrong. According to the author this is an insider's view and "the primary engine driving this book is accuracy". The author makes two other assertions that I will hold him to. "Neil's words in this book are direct quotes by me and others I know to be trustworthy", and "At times I will put myself in Neil's shoes to re-create his thoughts . . .". Well, I have only Barbree's word for the "insider" aspect and will return to it later.

So far as accuracy is concerned, the primary engine doesn't seem to be quite firing on all cylinders. At times the author appears to be very careful with his phraseology, giving a misleading impression whilst avoiding being pinned down. I will give one trifling example from his account of Apollo 8 on page 172: "signals between Apollo 8 and Mission Control would be blocked for more than twenty minutes". Since it was actually 35 minutes the statement is not untrue but is misleading. More seriously, on page 194 discussing Tom Stafford we have: "secretly has test-flown two versions of Russia's MiGs". Well not by Apollo 10 he hadn't, Stafford flew the MiGs years later after he'd left the astronaut office so clearly misleading. Or how about page 149 discussing training in the LLTV prior to Apollo 7: "likely moon-landing commanders Neil Armstrong, Pete Conrad, Jim Lovell, Alan Shepard, David Scott, John Young and Gene Cernan busied themselves trying to master flying the Bedstead".
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful By Murdue on September 3, 2014
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
First Man was much better, more detailed, more scientific, more meaty. This book is fluff and narrative, especially the contrived conversations and discussions are just too much. I am sure Neil was quiet and dignified, but the man was an engineer and scientist and loved his subject matter. Having attended UC Engineering while he was Dean (not mentioned in the book) and also a resident of his small community, I know the man by reputation pretty well. I just don't think this fluff piece captured the real Neil Armstrong very well.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful By Delta Sigma on August 10, 2014
Format: Hardcover
Another loser book from Mr. Barbree. For somebody who spent his professional life reporting on the space program, this book has way too many historical and technical errors (I noted over 50 of them). And since I was an engineer on Gemini and Apollo at Kennedy, I think I have a pretty good perspective. The most preposterous error is the photo caption on page 280 where he states that it shows Columbia in lunar orbit while the LM is still on the surface. So who took the photo, lunar aliens?

I'm sure Mr. Armstrong would be very upset with this book; he deserves much better.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful By Dave on July 14, 2014
Format: Hardcover
This is a very good foirst person bio of the first man to walk on the Moon. As a journalist for NBC news, Jay Barbree was on hand for most of the events he writes about in this, the second major bio of Neil Armstrong published in the last few years (In 2005, James Hansen published "First Man," which he said he wrote with Armstrong's approval and cooperation).

Barbree says he and Armstrong were close friends. He works hard to prove this to the reader, with a liberal sprinkling of anecdotes and statements that sort of shout, "Neil liked me best!" I have no way of knowing whether Armstrong really trusted Barbree, or whether they were truly dear friends, but you can't blame the reader for being a little suspicious. Armstrong called so few people "friends," and members of the news media were not typically high on his list.

Still, it's a great read, and it puts a more human face on Armstrong than almost any book I've read about this most unique and enigmatic of American heroes.
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18 of 25 people found the following review helpful By Aeropix on July 22, 2014
Format: Hardcover
This sad attempt to exploit a friendship is long on poorly written space history and short on insight. Neil Armstrong deserves better. This is hack writing, repetitive in places and boring in others. How Barbree could claim close access to Armstrong, and yet write so insipidly, proves baffling. And did anybody at St. Martin's Press proofread the galleys? Here's one of many examples, from page 90: "Neil knew the Russians [sic] clear warning to their cosmonauts that they were headed for the moon was well noted by his agency." Bad writing + bad grammar + bad punctuation + the passive voice = a horrible disservice to the last American hero. Armstrong was a gifted writer, and would be appalled to have his name on this book. There are better accounts elsewhere of the Apollo program; unfortunately, we'll have to wait for somebody else to write the definitive biography of Armstrong.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful By J. Haught on September 10, 2014
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Sloppily written and edited, and written as a "buddy" instead of a journalist. Characteristic of other Barbree work.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful By A teacher on July 25, 2014
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
This book was something of a disappointment to me. As mentioned by another reviewer, considering the apparently close friendship the author had with Neil Armstrong, very little new information is revealed here. In fact, some issues, known to be somewhat controversial, seemed glossed over. For example, the question of who would be first on the moon, discussed in detail in James Hansen’s authorized biography, reportedly included high-level meetings at NASA and lobbying by Buzz Aldrin, but none of this is mentioned here. Occasionally the author lapses into cliché (e.g. we are told Christa McAuliffe had “a smile as wide as her New England roots” and Armstrong’s second wife, Carol Knight, “has a smile as wide as Ohio...”)
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