Forever Young: A Life of Adventure in Air and Space

Forever Young: A Life of Adventure in Air and Space

Forever Young: A Life of Adventure in Air and Space

Forever Young: A Life of Adventure in Air and Space

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Overview

He walked on the Moon. He flew six space missions in three different programs—more than any other human. He served with NASA for more than four decades. His peers called him the "astronaut's astronaut."

Enthusiasts of space exploration have long waited for John Young to tell the story of his two Gemini flights, his two Apollo missions, the first-ever Space Shuttle flight, and the first Spacelab mission. Forever Young delivers all that and more: Young's personal journey from engineering graduate to fighter pilot, to test pilot, to astronaut, to high NASA official, to clear-headed predictor of the fate of Planet Earth.

Young, with the assistance of internationally distinguished aerospace historian James Hansen, recounts the great episodes of his amazing flying career in fascinating detail and with wry humor. He portrays astronauts as ordinary human beings and NASA as an institution with the same ups and downs as other major bureaucracies. He frankly discusses the risks of space travel, including what went wrong with the Challenger and Columbia shuttles.

Forever Young is one of the last memoirs produced by an early American astronaut. It is the first memoir written by a chief of the NASA astronaut corps. Young's experiences and candor make this book indispensable to everyone interested in the U.S. space program.



John W. Young, retired astronaut and former NASA executive, has received more than eighty major awards for his career in aerospace, including six honorary doctorates.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813049335
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Publication date: 09/10/2013
Pages: 424
Sales rank: 711,576
Product dimensions: 9.20(w) x 6.10(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

John W. Young (1930-2018) was an astronaut and NASA executive. He received more than eighty major awards for his career in aerospace, including six honorary doctorates.

James R. Hansen is professor of history and former director of the Honors College at Auburn University. He has been associated with the NASA History Program for the past thirty-one years, and is the author of First Man: The Life of Neil Armstrong and coauthor of Truth, Lies, and O-Rings: Inside the Space Shuttle "Challenger" Disaster.

Table of Contents

Foreword vii

Prologue: "Go" or "No-Go" 1

Part I A Flying Career

1 From Cartersville to Georgia Tech 9

2 Gunnery Officer to Naval Aviator 23

3 Fighter Pilot to Test Pilot 32

4 Pax River 42

Part II Into Orbit

5 The New Nine and Project Gemini 57

6 Countdown 71

7 Three Orbits 79

8 Dual Rendezvous 86

Part III Lunar Journeys

9 From a Fire to the Moon 111

10 Call Sign Charlie Brown 125

11 From Tranquility to a Lost Moon 140

12 To the Descartes Highlands 152

13 In the Briar Patch 172

14 The End of Moon Landings 191

Part IV The Shuttle Era

15 Enterprise 213

16 "The Boldest Test Flight in History" 223

17 Advent of the "Operational" Shuttle 240

18 A Steep Spiral Staircase 254

19 The Challenger Disaster 272

20 A Mountain of Memos 295

21 "The Next Logical Step" 320

22 On a Wing and a Prayer 332

Epilogue: When Worlds Collide 356

Abbreviations 375

Notes 379

Index 403

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Young was the best engineer and best test pilot of all the astronauts of the early space age. Without question, he was the most important astronaut of the space shuttle era. He was the best ever chief of the Astronaut Office in Houston. Nobody matched him.”—Alan L. Bean “As the only astronaut to fly the Gemini, Apollo, and Space Shuttle ships, John’s passion for safety was the signature emphasis (even obsession) of his career.”—Glynn S. Lunney "John Young has been at the center of human spaceflight since the mid-1960s, and his revealing autobiography speaks to internal issues, external possibilities, and the commitment of this individual to the movement of humanity beyond earth."—Roger D. Launius, senior curator, space history, Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum "Young covers over forty years of NASA history in this breakthrough memoir, one that will inspire admiration for his achievements but also raise questions about the overall American space-faring enterprise."—Michael H. Gorn, author of NASA: The Complete Illustrated History

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