From Library Journal
In words as devastatingly heartbreaking as the photo on the book's cover, Smith uses his skill as a writer to capture the horrors of September 11, 2001. Smith is a retired New York City fireman and author of the bestselling Report from Engine Co. 82, so he is able to convey the mind-set of this "brotherhood." The firefighters, rescue workers, and police personnel who responded to the World Trade Center attack all went into this cataclysm to do their job-to rescue as many people as they possibly could. The author captures the raw emotion of the event as seen through the eyes of people who survived and also as a participant during the search and rescue mission. A cast of actors present the testimonies of survivors, making this work even more gripping. Excellently performed, Report from Ground Zero is highly recommended for all libraries.
Theresa Connors, Arkansas Tech Univ., RussellvilleCopyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Audio Cassette
edition.
Review
September 11 2001 was one of those terrible, defining moments in world history that imprints itself on to the subconscious in such a way that most people will always be able to recall exactly what they were doing when they heard or saw the first reports of the planes striking the World Trade Center. Furthermore, there are those people for whom their actions at the time they heard the news became the defining moments of their lives - the firefighters who were called - or volunteered - to go to the scene and become part of the rescue effort, many of them tragically losing their lives at the scene. For most of us, it is incomprehensible that a human being would be able to put aside their fear in the face of such a terrible disaster and walk towards the heart of the inferno instead of fleeing in an attempt to save their own life. For a firefighter in the New York City Fire Department, it was inconceivable that he would not do so. Dennis Smith, dubbed 'the Poet Laureate of Firefighters' by the New York Post, is a former New York firefighter who published his classic bestseller, Report from Engine Company 82, in 1972. At the time of the terrorist attacks he was 60 and retired from active service, yet when he heard the news on September 11 he rushed to the scene and worked tirelessly alongside the rescue workers for several weeks. Among the dead were former colleagues and the sons of his friends. Perhaps because Smith is a friend and former comrade, the men who survived the tragedy were able to open up to him in a way that they would not to an outsider. The book is presented as a series of vignettes as the men - and a few women - recall their experiences on that day and during the desperate weeks that followed. He has a gift for capturing the rhythms and cadences of normal speech, yet using the juxtaposition of the accounts to present a terrible, vivid picture of exactly what it was to be there on that day amid the falling bodies and the smothering dark dust and the heat of the flames, exposed to sights most of us could not imagine in our worst nightmares. He captures the fading hopes of the relatives, and their anger when the rescue efforts were scaled down; yet most of all, he captures the unique brotherhood of the New York City Fire Department, son following father into the service for generation after generation, and conveys the enormity of the loss of 343 of their comrades. It is not a comfortable read, yet it is strangely compelling, and the main theme that shines through the book is a positive one - the power of goodness in the human spirit. A proportion of the royalties will go to the relevant charities. (Kirkus UK)
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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