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Awards
OverviewRecounts the survival efforts of thousands of people who were inside the World Trade Center on the morning of September 11, in an account that also raises questions about building safety and New York's emergency preparedness. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jim Dwyer , Kevin FlynnPublisher: Henry Holt & Company Inc Imprint: Henry Holt & Company Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 25.00cm Weight: 0.662kg ISBN: 9780805076820ISBN 10: 0805076824 Pages: 322 Publication Date: 12 January 2005 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Awaiting stock Table of ContentsReviews“A heart-stopping, meticulous account. . . . I suspect that you, like me, will read this book in a single suspenseful sitting, even though we know the ending.” --James B. Stewart, The New York Times Book Review <br>“The chief virtue of 102 Minutes, Jim Dwyer and Kevin Flynn's unsparing, eloquent history of the struggle to survive inside the World Trade Center, is the authors' insistence that truth supplant myth. However comforting myths may be after a defeat, they're useless in assessing what went wrong and may actually be impediments to preventing future disasters.”<br>--John Farmer (former senior counsel to the 9/11 Commission), The Washington Post Book World <br>“An astounding reconstruction of what happened inside the World Trade Center. . . . These are stories, after all, you have to share.” --Susannah Meadows, Newsweek <br>“Exhaustively researched and smoothly written. . . . Dwyer and Flynn’s most impressive achievement: wr A heart-stopping, meticulous account. . . . I suspect that you, like me, will read this book in a single suspenseful sitting, even though we know the ending. --James B. Stewart, The New York Times Book Review <br> The chief virtue of 102 Minutes, Jim Dwyer and Kevin Flynn's unsparing, eloquent history of the struggle to survive inside the World Trade Center, is the authors' insistence that truth supplant myth. However comforting myths may be after a defeat, they're useless in assessing what went wrong and may actually be impediments to preventing future disasters. <br>--John Farmer (former senior counsel to the 9/11 Commission), The Washington Post Book World <br> An astounding reconstruction of what happened inside the World Trade Center. . . . These are stories, after all, you have to share. --Susannah Meadows, Newsweek <br> Exhaustively researched and smoothly written. . . . Dwyer and Flynn' s most impressive achievement: writing in a way that confers dignity on each subject. This is one book that will stay with most readers for a very long time. -- Michelle Green, People <br> For those of us haunted by the tragedy, an indispensable book. -- O Magazine <br> [A] harrowing, deeply reported, practically minute-by-minute and floor-by-floor portrayal. . . . Insightful, compassionate, and unrelievedly tense. --Michael Ollove, The Baltimore Sun <br> A masterpiece of reporting....succinct...riveting enough to be read in a sitting...heart-wrenching...Brilliant and troubling. --Kevin Baker, New York Times <br> Poignant, emotion-stirring and important...a story of how ordinary peopleexhibit extraordinary traits in times of peril. --Tom Walker, Denver Post <br> It took the authors three years to describe what happened in 102 minutes...The book is worth the wait. --Ingrid Ahlgren, Providence Journal <br> The writing - sometimes searing, sometimes factual but always appropriate - brings the human experience of disaster into focus. --Rosemary Herbert, Boston Herald <br> Many of the stories are astounding; almost all are heartbreaking...They accord these men and women the honor they deserve. --Brian Palmer, N ewsday Author Information"Jim Dwyer is the coauthor of ""Actual Innocence"" and ""Two Seconds Under the World,"" and the author of ""Subway Lives."" A Pulitzer Prize winner, he writes the About New York column for ""The New York Times."" He lives in New York City. Kevin Flynn, a special projects editor at ""The New York Times,"" was the newspaper's police bureau chief on September 11, having previously worked as a reporter for the New York ""Daily News,"" ""Newsday,"" and ""The Advocate"" (Stamford). He lives in Connecticut." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |