Hiroshima: A New Edition with a Final Chapter Written Forty Years After the Explosion
Hiroshima: A New Edition with a Final Chapter Written Forty Years After the Explosion
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Random House Adult
Annotation: Account of the catastrophic event that heralded the coming of the atomic age. This edition includes a final chapter written forty years after the explosion about the same compelling characters and what the author discovered about them.
Genre: [World history]
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #137301
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Teaching Materials: Search
Common Core/STEAM: Common Core Common Core
Copyright Date: 1985
Edition Date: 1989 Release Date: 03/04/89
Pages: 152 p.
ISBN: Publisher: 0-679-72103-7 Perma-Bound: 0-8479-1001-6
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-679-72103-1 Perma-Bound: 978-0-8479-1001-4
Dewey: 940.54
LCCN: 88040016
Dimensions: 18 cm.
Language: English
Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Library Journal
Wilson's High School Catalog
Word Count: 49,183
Reading Level: 8.4
Interest Level: 9+
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 8.4 / points: 9.0 / quiz: 10036 / grade: Upper Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:7.5 / points:14.0 / quiz:Q05244
Lexile: 1190L

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and bestselling author John Hersey's seminal work of narrative nonfiction which has defined the way we think about nuclear warfare.  “One of the great classics of the war" (The New Republic) that tells what happened in Hiroshima during World War II through the memories of the survivors of the first atomic bomb ever dropped on a city.

"The perspective [Hiroshima] offers from the bomb’s actual victims is the mandatory counterpart to any Oppenheimer viewing." —GQ Magazine

 
“Nothing can be said about this book that can equal what the book has to say. It speaks for itself, and in an unforgettable way, for humanity.” —The New York Times
 
Hiroshima is the story of six human beings who lived through the greatest single manmade disaster in history. John Hersey tells what these six -- a clerk, a widowed seamstress, a physician, a Methodist minister, a young surgeon, and a German Catholic priest -- were doing at 8:15 a.m. on August 6, 1945, when Hiroshima was destroyed by the first atomic bomb ever dropped on a city. Then he follows the course of their lives hour by hour, day by day.

The New Yorker of August 31, 1946, devoted all its space to this story. The immediate repercussions were vast: newspapers here and abroad reprinted it; during evening half-hours it was read over the network of the American Broadcasting Company; leading editorials were devoted to it in uncounted newspapers.

Almost four decades after the original publication of this celebrated book John Hersey went back to Hiroshima in search of the people whose stories he had told. His account of what he discovered about them -- the variety of ways in which they responded to the past and went on with their lives -- is now the eloquent and moving final chapter of Hiroshima.


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