Neil Armstrong reflects on first Moon landing in new book

Cincinnati, Nov 06: Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the Moon, has never felt comfortable with the celebrity he achieved. In fact, it puzzles him.

Cincinnati, Nov 06: Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the Moon, has never felt comfortable with the celebrity he achieved. In fact, it puzzles him.
"Friends and colleagues, all of a sudden, looked at us, treated us slightly differently than they had months or years before when we were working together," the Apollo 11 astronaut told "60 minutes" in an interview. "I never quite understood that."

Armstrong, 75, rarely grants interviews. He agreed to one last month just before his only authorised biography, `First Man: The Life of Neil A Armstrong,` hit bookstores.

Author James R Hansen, an Auburn University professor and former NASA historian who wrote the biography, was allowed more than 50 hours of recorded interviews with Armstrong in his suburban Cincinnati home.

On July 20, 1969, Armstrong, then 38, stepped onto the Moon.

In the years since, he has taught at the University of Cincinnati and served on corporate boards, all the while rejecting interview requests.

In an e-mail response to `The Cincinnati Enquirer`, Armstrong said he reluctantly agreed to the book deal.

"Many individuals whose opinions i value have urged me to find a way to put my story in print," Armstrong said. "I concluded a biography would be superior to an autobiography.

"I believed the author should have access to my recollections and thoughts although he would not be bound to use or accept them."

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