Audiobook (abridged)6 hours
Report from Ground Zero: The Story of the Rescue Efforts at the World Trade Center
Written by Dennis Smith
Narrated by Ensemble Cast, Beth McDonald, Eric Conger and
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
4/5
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About this audiobook
What would make someone rush into a towering inferno and dash up stairs toward danger against a flow of human beings running in the opposite direction? Only someone who's been there can tell us.
More audiobooks from Dennis Smith
First In, Last Out: Leadership Lessons from the New York Fire Department Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5San Francisco Is Burning: The Untold Story of the 1906 Earthquake and Fires Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Report from Engine Co. 82 Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A Decade of Hope: Stories of Grief and Endurance from 9/11 Families and Friends Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
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Reviews for Report from Ground Zero
Rating: 3.9705882352941178 out of 5 stars
4/5
51 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Was nice having different narrators for all the different stories from male and female.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It's overwhelming to think of the amount of people who died on 9/11, so much so that its difficult to think how many in terms of just numbers. This book puts human faces to those numbers, both those that perished and those who survived and were left behind. The mateship of firefighters is something that's difficult to understand if you work in an office environment or similar, and that is a large focus of this book. Accounts are taken from different people at different times of the event, and those in particular that I hadn't heard before were of the firefighters trapped in the buildings, and their accounts of the collapses from the inside. For someone completely removed from this, it's a different account. But it's worthwhile remembering that the deaths suffered that day in context with what other countries deal with on a daily basis are mercifully low, and we should be thankful for that and remember how lucky we are to live in 'civilised' countries. But this book is a reminder how these things happen, what it's like when they happen, the fallout for individuals and their families, and why we should never stop working towards something like this never happening again. It goes without saying that we should all be in awe of these people who put themselves between us and danger every day. They are a unique breed.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/55689. Report From Ground Zero, by Dennis Smith (read 30 Apr 2020) This reports on what the author did and saw in the days after 9/11. He is particularly concerned with the outfit he was with and there is lots ot not too interesting matter in the book which I really did not care too much about, A book of more interest to some on more familiar with the situation.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Dennis Smith asks the question everyone can answer even nine years later, "where were you on September 11, 2001?" In Report From Ground Zero Smith asks key rescue personnel to recount the moments directly after seeing, hearing, or learning of the attack on the World Trade Center towers in Lower Manhattan. He calls each story a testimony. Smith starts by giving his own account which amounts to a litany of questions surrounding logistics and survival. As a retired New York City firefighter he anticipates the magnitude of destruction and ponders the challenges surrounding survival with great concern. As each rescue worker recounts that fateful, awful day a pattern starts to emerge. Initial disbelief turns into a sense of determination as the magnitude of destruction is fully realized. Every single response was to roll up the shirts sleeves, harden the jaw and with single minded pure grit get to work. After the dust has literally and figuratively settled other shared memories come to mind - how deathly quiet and dark everything became after the towers fell; how surreal the landscape. Like nothing they had even seen before or since.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Dennis Smith was a firefighter for eighteen years. He wrote a famous book, [Report from Engine Co. 82], which made him a successful writer (2 million copies sold), but he kept his firefighter heart. Even in official retirement from the job, he carried the badge and title of an honorary chief in FDNY and served on the boards of several firefighter-related charities.On Sept. 11, 2001, he showed up at Ground Zero, where the help of this retired but experienced firefighter (along with many other retired firefighters who volunteered their skills) was accepted in the rescue and recovery efforts. Early on, he determined to write a book, dedicated to the first responders who died that day -- and whose names are all listed in the dedication. While the book recognizes the fact of the civilian deaths, it is about the uniformed personnel, especially firefighters, who perished and their brothers (and a few sisters) in service who sought to bring them home.The first section of the book (exactly half of the book) deals with the actual day September 11. It is comprised primarily of first-person accounts collected from those who responded to the alarms on that fateful day. There are a few exceptions: a few accounts from famly members of first responders; some accounts by Smith providing background about responders who perished and whose fate is recounted in subsequent stories by rescue personnel. These accounts are amazingly straightforward. While aware of the magnitude of the disaster, the danger to themselves, and the losses which were taking place around them, they remained, in large part, focused on the job they had to do. There is no melodrama in the telling of these stories, and not an ounce of self-pity -- but, then, there is plenty of drama in the straight facts. Some of these folks survived being buried alive -- and then, freed from the rubble, eventually went on to search for others.The second half of the book details. day by day, the rescue and recovery efforts which followed the initial disaster. While the first half of the book had a goodly representation of police voices (NYPD and Port Authority), this half is almost exclusively a firefighter's story. We see the family nature of firefighting in New York City; many of the elder firefighters searching so faithfully at Ground Zero are searching for their missing sons. Public service, you see, seems to run in the blood; several families lost multiple members -- in one case two brothers, a firefighter and a police officer.The book also chronicles the growing tension as operations morphed from rescue to recovery to clean-up. Firefighters have a strong ethic that none of their own shall ever be left behind at the scene of a tragedy. But the painstaking sifting of rubble for remains was a slow process; there were great pressures, economic and psychological, to get things cleaned up faster than a thorough recovery of remains allowed.And through it all, the funerals and memorial services continued, as firefighters honored their fallen comrades -- facing the painful decisions regarding whose funerals to attend in the wake of so much death. It is impossible for anyone who wasn't there to really, really grasp the reality of Ground Zero on 9/11 and the days that followed. But this book gave me a clearer glimpse than I've ever had before. It takes us into the heart and soul of the disaster at Ground Zero and of those on its front lines. It is painful, yet strangely uplifting to see the courage and integrity that these brave souls bring to their life's work. Recommended.