Ablaze: The Story of the Heroes and Victims of Chernobyl
by Piers Paul Read
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Early on the morning of April 26, 1986, the nuclear reactor at the fourth unit of the V.I. Lenin power station at Chernobyl exploded. In the terror and panic that followed, an engineer grabbed a dosimetrist to ask for a radiation level and was told it was off the dial. "With a dread feeling in his heart, Sasha Yuvchenko at last realized that they were all almost certainly doomed to die ..." Piers Paul Read's enthralling account of this disaster and its aftermath is filled with acts of show more courage - as well as bumbling confusion, secrecy, lies and cover-ups. To chronicle the catastrophe, he interviewed the engineers and operators who were on duty during the fateful test that was being conducted on the night of April 25; talked to the director of the power station, who was serving a ten-year sentence for negligence; and visited the hitherto top-secret institutes once run by Beria's Ministry of Medium Machine Building: the Kurchatov Institute, Moscow's Hospital No. 6 and the once-closed city of Obninsk. This is the first account to take advantage of the declassification of nuclear information in the former Soviet Union and the loosening of tongues that followed the failure of the coup in 1991. The author also gained access to the transcripts of the trial of the Chernobyl reactor operators, as well as the protocol of the previously secret Medical Commission, and other confidential reports. In the years that followed the accident, the trauma of Chernobyl became a major factor in the fall of Communism in the Soviet Union. The government covered up the deficiencies in the reactor's design, deceiving Western experts in Vienna and making scapegoats of the personnel, but, because of the accident, the Russian people had lost faith in the system. Now, seven years later, despite the reassurance of some experts, others still believe that Chernobyl may ultimately claim more victims than did World War II, and relocation continues from contaminated areas in Russia, Belo-russia and the Ukraine. Ablaze: The Story of the Heroes and Victims of Chernobyl is the definitive account of the greatest environmental disaster in the history of mankind. show lessTags
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A good book about the Chernobyl nuclear accident, however because it is dated and not current, the story was a slow go. Filled with interesting tidbits, it was worth the read.
But, as one who has read a lot about this tragedy, this book cannot compare highly to the others.
But, as one who has read a lot about this tragedy, this book cannot compare highly to the others.
5037. Ablaze The Story of the Heroes and Victims of Chernobyl, by Piers Paul Read (read 25 Jun 2013) This book was published in 1993, seven years after the dire event on April 26, 1986, and so has some perspective but probably a newer book would give a better picture of the long term effect of the event. The part of the book telling of the events of April 26 and the time immediately thereafter is full of excitement and is good reading. Then the book tells of the investigations and coverups and tends to be of less interest. (On page 110 of the book the author tells he talked to a man who "had read in a Soviet newspaper that after the accident at Three Mile Island, the evacuation had taken five days and that 87 people had died in the show more rush." But whether this was true or false is not told, and I think Read should have told us whether it was false or not.) The author believes Chernobyl played a role in the fall of the Soviet Empire, and he is no doubt right. I would like to read a good book on Russia since 1991. Does anybody know of a book which tells how much has changed since that time and how much has not? If so, I hope he or she will tell me of such a book. show less
Fascinating. The human story. A little hard to follow in places, though, because it bounced around in time.
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Non-Fiction Nuclear History
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- Canonical DDC/MDS
- 363.17990947714
- Canonical LCC
- TD196.R3
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- Nonfiction, History, General Nonfiction, Science & Nature
- DDC/MDS
- 363.17990947714 — Society, Government, and Culture Social problems and social services Public Safety - Police, Crime Investigation Public safety from hazards Hazardous materials Specific types of hazardous materials Radioactive materials, nuclear accidents Ukraine
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- TD196 .R3 — Technology Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering
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