Photographing America's First Astronauts: Project Mercury Through the Lens of Bill Taub Spiral-Bound | May 1, 2023

J.L. Pickering, John Bisney, Eugene Kranz (Foreword by)

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Featuring more than 600 photos, Photographing America's First Astronauts: Project Mercury Through the Lens of Bill Taub is the most complete photographic account of Project Mercury ever published. Previous Project Mercury books largely have relied on the relatively limited number of photos released by NASA. This book, however, showcases hundreds of never-before-seen images of America’s first manned space program by NASA’s first staff photographer, Bill Taub. Taub went everywhere with the Mercury astronauts, capturing their daily activities from 1959 to 1963. As a result, his photos provide a unique and intimate behind-the-scenes look at the people and operations of Project Mercury in real time.

Drawing on Taub’s recently discovered archive of thousands of black-and-white and color prints, slides, and transparencies, this is the first book to comprehensively visually document Project Mercury. No previous book has devoted as many images to each of the Mercury Seven astronauts and their pioneering spaceflights. Other chapters cover astronaut selection and training, NASA management, and facilities at Cape Canaveral, Florida. Each image is accompanied by a detailed caption. The foreword is by legendary NASA Flight Director Eugene Kranz.

Publisher: Longleaf Services
Original Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 340 pages
ISBN-10: 1612498566
Item Weight: 2.74 lbs
Dimensions: 8.5 x 1.02 x 11.0 inches
"Bill's iconic images will live on forever. He and his camera acted as the eyes for all of us who couldn't be there. Bill captured the spirit and emotion of NASA's pioneering years through his images of astronaut training, launches, landings, and postflight celebrations. At every Apollo anniversary I photographed, the astronauts would embrace Bill as though he were part of the crew. I will always look to Bill and his work as the ultimate examples of what it means to be a storyteller for NASA, and I'm honored to have known him." —Bill Ingalls, senior contract photographer, NASA Headquarters
Photo historian and author J. L. Pickering has conducted photo research into the US manned space program for nearly fifty years-acquiring, organizing, and restoring more than 250,000 prints, slides, transparencies, and digital files, the largest such private archive. His sources include government archives, NASA retirees, news photographers, private collectors, and auction houses. One of the world's leading manned space photography experts, he is regularly contacted by authors, retired astronauts, and even NASA for photo assistance.