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The Boy Who Fell Out of the Sky: A True Story by Ken Dornstein
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The Boy Who Fell Out of the Sky: A True Story

by Ken Dornstein

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Author Ken Dornstein's brother David was on Pan Am flight 103, which was destroyed by a terrorist's bomb in 1988. The 25-year-old David, and all the other passengers, were killed when the bomb went off and the plane crashed in Lockerbie, Scotland.

This memoir tells the story of Ken's struggle to reconcile himself to the death of the older brother he adored and his quest to understand who David really was.

Ken throws himself into a prodigious research project, seeking out David's friends, lovers, and acquaintances to gather every impression and memory they can share about David. He scours medical and first-person accounts of how the body reacts when a plane breaks up in mid-air, with grizzly details of the physiology of suffering rapid decompression at 30,000 feet. He reads, re-reads, and re-re-reads David's letters and notebooks. He travels to Lockerbie to visit the locations where victims of the crash fell, and interviews the police and investigators who were at the scene in 1988. He even goes so far as to track down one of David's old girlfriends -- and marries her.

According to articles published at the time of the crash, David had an unpublished manuscript with him on the plane. It was a virtuoso first novel that would have set the literary world ablaze, but was destroyed and scattered in the wreckage. It quickly becomes clear this anecdote is a myth and that David was not the super-human novelist in waiting that Ken (and David....perhaps), had imagined.

By turns creepy, poignant, and fascinating -- and always brilliantly written -- "The Boy Who Fell Out of the Sky" is a compelling read. A telling account of how the living put their lives back together when the dead are gone. ( )
1 vote ElizabethChapman | Nov 14, 2009 |
Solidly Goodf ( )
  sbrca | Aug 3, 2008 |
This memoir started well and Dornstein really drew me into the story, mostly because I so completely identified with his experiences and emotions upon hearing of his brother's death. It spiraled downward a bit from there though, but overall was an intriguing - if at times, odd - read. ( )
  bookem | May 12, 2008 |
This book is haunting and heartbreaking, and I recommend it to anyone who appreciates a story that reveals a person's soul.

From the beginning this story had my attention. I suffered with Ken as he lived through the turmoil of his life after his brother's death. There were times when I wanted to reach through the pages and grab him, shake him, get him to stop what he was doing before he made the same mistakes his brother did... yet all the while I understood WHY he felt he had to do the things he did.

I hope both of the Dornstein brothers have found their peace... ( )
  wispywillow | May 26, 2007 |
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The night my brother died, I slept fine, back in my old bed in my old room in the old house where I grew up.
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Pan Am Flight 103

Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0375503595, Hardcover)

In this stunning, emotionally charged memoir, Ken Dornstein interweaves the moving story of his own coming-of-age with the promise of greatness his brother never lived to fulfill. The Boy Who Fell Out of the Sky is a heartbreaking but profoundly hopeful book about finding beauty in the midst of tragedy and making sense of it.
David Dornstein was twenty-five years old, a handsome, charismatic young man on the verge of becoming an extraordinary writer, when he boarded Pan Am Flight 103 from London on the evening of December 21, 1988. Thirty-eight minutes after takeoff, he died, along with the 258 other passengers and crew, when a terrorist’s plastic explosive ripped the plane apart over Lockerbie, Scotland.
David’s brother, Ken, was nineteen, a college sophomore home on winter break, when the call came. All his life Ken had looked up to David, confided in him, followed where he led. David’s death left Ken with a void that both crushed and consumed him. What were his brother’s plans when he died? Was David really carrying home a draft of the great novel everyone knew was in him? Was he in love with the woman he was living with overseas? Ken Dornstein needed to learn the truth about his brother’s life and death. In this harrowing and affecting memoir, he records what he found out.
It was years before Ken could bring himself to confront the stacks of notebooks and letters David left behind, but once he began to read he was drawn deep into his brother’s world. From David’s early obsession with writing down his every thought to his misadventures on the streets of New York, from an unraveling love affair in Israel to a devastating childhood secret, piece by piece Ken assembles a complex, disturbing portrait of an artist struggling to find a voice for passions that often threatened to tear him apart. Then, by chance, Ken runs into David’s college girlfriend on a train and everything changes once again. He starts to question his motives and his memories, and finally sets off on a complicated journey to finish the book that his brother started.
As haunting as a dream, as electrifying as the day’s news, The Boy Who Fell Out of the Sky is an incandescent and unforgettable account of one man’s struggle to find inspiration in his brother’s life and create a life of his own. What begins as a tragedy turns into a love story of deeply affirming power.

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 14:38:45 -0500)

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