This document begins with a list of acronyms and abbreviations. In the previous paragraph, the acronym EVA appears often. You can check the list and see that EVA stands for extravehicular activity. This list makes reading much easier because the reports do have some technical aspects to them. It is not all hard to read lingo though. You read direct quotes from the astronauts themselves. You get to find out what they were thinking and feeling. There are pictures accompanying many of the reports. Each report has the date, duration, spacecraft, crew and the spacewalker listed in the beginning. They also list the purpose of the EVA because of course, the astronauts did not do the same thing when they went out. Sometimes they were repairing items, or adding something on. They were demonstrating and retrieving things. After the list comes the description of the mission. This, to me, was the interesting reading because it was in these paragraphs you read actual thoughts from the astronauts who were there. It can be difficult to really imagine what it would be like to be in space and reading these descriptions makes it more real.
People interested in the work they do in space would find this document useful. The list of abbreviations in the front alone is a good resource. The introduction gives a brief overview of everything. This isn’t a document you need to read cover to cover. It is very easy to thumb through reading the reports you find interesting or checking the pictures. The reports are in chronological order so it would be very easy to find a specific one if you are interested. Come by and take a look at Walking to Olympus, you won’t be disappointed.