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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent history and illustrations in a concise volume!, December 18, 2001
I've surveyed or browsed or reviewed about 20 items relating to the World Trade Center attacks and this is among the top three that I can recommend. It's a "slim volume," to borrow a cliche that book collectors use, but what's inside is an excellent illustrated history of the Twin Towers, supplemented by wonderfully chosen photographs, all laid out in sequential order, leading up to that fateful day in September. Most of the other books in this "category" are truly "tributes," filled with emotionally-laden text and images designed to pull the heart strings. This one, despite being called a "tribute," is in fact, a handy summation of history and pictures that places the Towers in their proper context. You're moved, but you're also getting terrific information about an "icon" that we didn't know was an "icon" until it was destroyed. It's the story about two buildings we took for granted -- criticizing and disliking them -- until they were taken from America forever. Now the ground beneath it is sacred. I'm not knocking the other "tributes," but it seems that a lot of them contain too much or too little -- some have almost zero text, and those with pictures -- are just different views of the same thing. There is a "straight-ahead" style to this book that betrays its title -- yes, it's a "tribute," but it doesn't feel like a "rush to market" item like the others that have been offered in the last month -- just in time, in kind of a dark way, for Hanukkah or Christmas. The other books I can now recommend are: "One Nation," by the editors of Life Magazine -- and "September 11, 2001: A Record of Tragedy, Heroism and Hope," by the editors of New York Magazine. Buy these three books for your PERMANENT library and simply browse through the others at your local bookstore before you buy.
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