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LAST MAN OUT The Story of The Springhill Mine Disaster “This is a fine, harrowing, brutally detailed work that will make you savor daylight in a way you never have — unless of course you’re already a coal miner.”
“….[a] most vivid account of horror and heroism, of exemplary human behavior under the most adverse circumstances and of the buffoonery of those who tried to exploit those admirable survivors.”
“Last Man Out is the riveting story of a mine disaster, filled with incomparable second-by-second detail of men fighting for their lives… and an inquiry into the ripple effects of catastrophe.”
“Melissa Fay Greene so captures the experience of being trapped in the absolute night of a failed coal mine that you can almost see the pale beams of dying headlamps and taste the last sips of coal-laced drinking water. Having shared the experience, a sympathetic reader cannot help but marvel at the absurdity of the disaster’s aftermath. This is a fine, harrowing, brutally detailed work that will make you savor daylight in a way you never have — unless of course you’re already a coal miner.”
“This is a superb study of the human condition in extremis… Greene’s previous books, Praying for Sheetrock and The Temple Bombing, were National Book Award finalists. LAST MAN OUT will challenge those readers who tend to prolong the pleasure of a compelling book by rationing the last chapters: they set the book aside after savoring one page and return to it later. This book is sure to break them of that habit.”
“Melissa Fay Greene, who proved herself a good hand at compelling nonfiction in “Praying for Sheetrock” and “The Temple Bombing,” continues her string of successes with “Last Man Out”… Greene, focusing on two groups of survivors, captures for us some of the agony of their waiting, raging with thirst in utter darkness, for rescue or, what seems increasingly likely, death…Then, when she tells the stories of each survivor’s recovery, the narrative opens up, like the petals of a flower.”
A New York Times Notable Book Chicago Tribune’s Favorite Nonfiction Books 2003 Toronto Globe Best Books of 2003 Cox News Best Books of 2003 A New York Public Library Best Book, 2004 |
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