I have just finished reading a fascinating article about Apollo 13, and I thought I would share it since it doesn't seem to be mentioned here.
It takes the view that the safe return of Lovell, Haise and Swigert was not so much attributable to a series of lucky engineering breaks and last minute
"ad hoc" pieces of brilliant engineering, which is the commonly held view of Joe Public, but rather it was down to the prior endless training, endless simulations and dedication of the NASA staff, many of whom prepared themselves for just such a catastrophe long before Apollo 13 .
Much is made of the lengths to which John Aaron and his electrical guys went to in order to come up with a start sequence for the CSM prior to reentry, but what is less known is that they had even bigger problems in getting the LM to start up so that it could be used as a lifeboat in the first place, and that they had actually worked that scenario before as a simulation.
In fact, they came to the conclusion that if they had not have already worked out the start sequence prior to the event of Apollo 13, they would not have had time to work it out in "real time", and would have lost the crew.
It is a 2005 article, but it really is a good read for anyone interested in the Apollo programme.
http://spectrum.ieee.org/aerospace/space-flight/apollo-13-we-have-a-solution/0