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About 3,000 people lost their lives in
the terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington, D.C.,
on September 11, 2001. Thousands more narrowly escaped, their
survival a result of eerily prescient spur-of-the-moment decisions,
acts of superhuman courage, the unfailing kindness of strangers,
and, in some cases, fortuitous strokes of luck. September
11: An Oral History unites the voices of that day. It is at
once a dramatic reminder of one of the most devastating events
in history of the nation and a tribute to the spirit of cooperation
and the outpourings of empathy that marked that day for so
many people in the United States and abroad.
Written and compiled by Dean E. Murphy,
who covered the attacks on the World Trade Center for the
New York Times, September 11: An Oral History presents vivid
eyewitness accounts by those who rushed to the scene, as well
as the stories of people around the country and abroad who
watched as events unfolded on television and waited for news
of friends, family, and acquaintances.
A priest who runs an adoption center
near the WTC paints an unforgettable portrait of what he calls
"the meeting place of Hell and Earth that morning"; a businessman
from Los Angeles in New York to conduct a training seminar
recounts in breathstopping detail his descent with a blind
colleague from the 78th floor of the North Tower; a senior
at a high school; the owners of a small business in Arkansas
describe their thoughts and feelings as they waited to hear
from a customer who had become part of their lives though
they had never actually met him; and a civilian employee at
the Pentagon recalls giving up hope in a smoke-filled office,
her hair on fire, only to be led to safety by the soothing
voice of a colleague.
Contributions from firefighters, police,
and military personnel, and other rescue workers demonstrate
the mixture of professionalism and humanity that justly elevated
them, despite their own modesty, to the status of national
heroes. There are stories, too, of those who narrowly missed
being part of the mayhem--including a family of four who changed
their plane reservations from one of the hijacked jets and
others whose arrivals at work were delayed by unlikely coincidences
and quirks of fate like forgetting to turn on the coffeepot
the night before.
The first and only oral history of September
11 that presents people from all walks of life, these poignant,
often harrowing vignettes capture the grief, rage, and fear
that gripped the nationj--and offer an intimate, inspiring
look at the strengths that enabled us to move on.
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