Fishman wrote the book concentrating not on the biographies of
Neil Armstrong or
Buzz Aldrin, but writing about ordinary people and often overlooked scientists and engineers who worked on the project. In his review, Robert Schaefer, a research engineer at MIT
Haystack Observatory, writes that "between 1961 and 1966, 20,000 companies and a half a million workers were designing, building, or assembling pieces of Apollo ... if Apollo were a corporation, it would have been bigger than every Fortune 500 corporation except for GM." Fishman counted the numbers as "410,000 men and women at some 20,000 different companies [who] contributed to the effort".
Bill Tindall, "the talented writer and
orbital mechanics 'genius' from the
Langley Research Center", and
John Houbolt, NASA engineer who advocated for the
lunar orbit rendezvous (LOR). Fishman writes that "Apollo didn't usher in the
Space Age, but it did usher in the
Digital Age. It helped lay the foundation of the technology that created the digital revolution, and it helped give Americans a sense of excitement and anticipation about the Digital Age ... that had been completely missing before the 1960s began." == Reception ==