New York Times reporter Dean E. Murphy presents vivid eyewitness accounts of 9/11 by people from all walks of life. Poignant vignettes capture the grief, rage an fear that gripped the nation.
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New York Times reporter Dean E. Murphy presents vivid eyewitness accounts of 9/11 by people from all walks of life. Poignant vignettes capture the grief, rage an fear that gripped the nation.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best one volume I have read about Sept 11.,
This review is from: September 11: An Oral History (Hardcover)
This book is better, if only for hitting precisely the right tone for me as a reader, than the couple of other "oral history" volumes I have read on this subject. It is the opposite of commercial writing or wham-bam journalism: it has the serious purpose and tone of sensitive, well-written fiction. The stories in this particular book have become the "real" September 11, 2001 to me as a distant observer, that is, the virtual physical space my imagination inhabits when I think of those buildings and the people and the day. The vision of the participants is in ways more indelible, if that is possible, than the images of collapse that we have seen on TV scores or hundreds of times. Past a point, those images numb you; you cannot comprehend the how and why of such a thing happening, and it may take you a while to even come to that conclusion, after spending months trying to make sense of the puzzle and the horror. And eventually, to take some of the heartache away, you may do what a generation did with the Kennedy assasinations, turning them from high tragedy to an intellectual detective story. You think about the physics of the collapse, the engineering of the towers, the whereabouts of the criminal masterminds. You can only dwell on horror for so long. This book returns you to the human dimension that the footage of the falling buildings may, ironically, have dulled for you. There are moments here that will be with you the rest of your days. The still-interiorized words of those who lived through the worst of it, which we are priveleged to share here, can be harrowing and nearly overwhelmingly sad. But while it is often sad, this is not a sentimental memoir. Be warned, there is some very disturbing, specific content here. Murphy's September11: An Oral History is a profound book that belongs in anyone's library.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Don't Miss This Book,
By
This review is from: September 11: An Oral History (Hardcover)
This book tells the personal stories of a variety of people in New York, young and old, at the time the planes hit the World Trade Center. Each story is three to four pages long, which makes for easy reading. Each is well written and filled with emotion. I was truly on the edge of my seat reading some of these stories, even though I knew the end of their story (obviously they survived to tell about it). Why isn't this a best-seller?
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
More Informative than the news,
This review is from: September 11: An Oral History (Hardcover)
I found that this book provided a sense of what really happened than what I saw on T.V. While the news gave you all the facts and data, this author wrote interviews he took from people who were actually in the WTC, Pentagon, and those in surronding buildings. After reading this I finally had a sense of how people reacted during the horrific events.
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