Miracle on the Hudson: The Survivors of Flight 1549 Tell Their Extraordinary Stories of Courage, Faith, and Determination by William Prochnau, Laura Parker

BUY IT NEW

  • $25.00 List price
    $20.00 Online Price
    $18.00 Member price
    (Save 28%)
    Limited Time Offer! Everyone receives the Member Price on books.
    See Details
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9780345519948&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

BUY IT USED

10 copies from $12.75

See All Available

Pick Me Up

Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.

Enter a zip code

(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2009
  • 272pp
  • Sales Rank: 6,317

Reader Rating: (6 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Touching" See All

    More Formats 
    Available in eBook$9.99
    Buy it Used: 10 copies from $12.75 See All Available

    Customers who bought this also bought

     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Customer Reviews
    • Features

    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2009
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 272pp
    • Sales Rank: 6,317

    Synopsis

    In this heart-stopping, page-turning tale of fear, heroism, and redemption, the passengers of the Hudson River crash landing tell their remarkable stories.
     
    Millions watched the aftermath on television, while others witnessed the event actually happening from the windows of nearby skyscrapers. But only 155 people know firsthand what really happened on U.S. Airways Flight 1549 on January 15, 2009. Now, for the first time, the survivors detail their astounding, terrifying, and inspiring experiences on that freezing winter day in New York City. Written by two esteemed journalists, Miracle on the Hudson is the entire tale from takeoff to bird strike to touchdown to rescue, seen through the eyes and felt in the souls of those on board the fateful flight.

    Revealing many new and compelling details, Miracle on the Hudson dramatically evokes the explosion and "smell of burning flesh" as both engines were destroyed by geese, the violent landing on the river that felt like a "huge car wreck," the gridlock in the aisles as the plane filled swiftly with freezing water, and the thrill of the passengers' rescue from the wings and from rafts—all of it recalled by the "cross section of America" on board.

    Jay McDonald, a thirty-nine-year-old software developer, had survived brain-tumor surgery just two years earlier and now faced the unimaginable.

    Tracey Wolsko, a nervous flier, suddenly became other people's rock: "Just pray. It's going to be all right." Jim Whitaker, a construction executive, reassured a nervous mother of two young children on board, only later admitting, "I was pathologically lying the whole time." As the plane started sinking,Lucille Palmer, eighty-five, told her daughter to save herself: "Just leave me!"

    Featuring much more than what the media reported—moments of chaos in addition to stoicism and common sense, and the fortuitous mistakes and quick instincts that saved lives that otherwise would have been lost—Miracle on the Hudson is the chronicle of one of the most phenomenal feel-good stories of recent years, one that could have been a nightmare and instead became a stirring narrative of heroism and hope for our times.

    Publishers Weekly

    In a stunning display of skill and steely nerves, pilot Chesley Sullenberger managed a Hudson River water landing in freezing weather, with no engines, to save the lives of every single person aboard his aircraft. Aided by New York and New Jersey emergency responders steeped in post-9/11 training, Sullenberger and his crew did everything right when everything around them had gone horribly wrong. Interviewing survivors of flight 1549, husband-and-wife journalists Prochnau and Parker piece together a detailed, moment-by-moment account of the accident and its aftermath, getting inside the heads of ordinary people who demonstrated remarkable courage and humanity. Anyone who remembers the dramatic 2009 event will be riveted by this account, even with a forgone happy conclusion. Notably absent is the testimony of Captain Sullenberger, who saved his insights for his own book, Highest Duty, but this passengers'-eye-view narrative makes an absorbing, inspirational record.
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    More Reviews and Recommendations

    Biography

    William Prochnau and Laura Parker write collaborative articles for Vanity Fair, where Prochnau is a contributing editor. They interviewed 120 passengers of Flight 1549, as well as many first responders and rescuers. Prochnau, a former national correspondent for The Washington Post, has written three acclaimed books, including Once Upon A Distant War . Parker covered aviation for The Washington Post and spent 10 years as a national correspondent at USA Today. They live in Washington, D.C.

    Customer Reviews

    IT IS A MIRACLE , INDEED.by Anonymous

    Reader Rating:
    See Detailed Ratings

    January 25, 2010: I WAS IN BRONX, NEW YORK THAT DAY THE AIRCRAFT PASSED ON TOP OF THE 3RD AVE AND 149 ST. ALL THE LAGAURDIA TRAFFIC PASS FROM TOP OF THIS POSITION. I AM AN EX AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLER AND NATURALLY THIS KIND OF INCIDENT GET MY IMMIDIATE ATTENTION. I WAS LISTENING TO 1010 WINS RADIO AND HEARED EVRY THING MINUTE BY MINUTE LIVE ON RADIO. THE AUTHOR MENTIONED EVERYTHING IN PERFACTLY NATURAL STYLE .READING THE BOOK I FEEL THE SAME WAY I FELT ON THE DAY WHEN THE WHOLE INCIDENT HAPPENED AND THAN TURNED INTO A MIRACLE.

    I Also Recommend: Bird Hazard In Aviation.

    WHERE IS EVERYBODY HIDING ON THIS ONE? "MIRACLE ON THE HUDSON" IS ONE OF BEST READS OF THEby James_Candorst

    Reader Rating:
    See Detailed Ratings

    November 06, 2009: I read a condensation of "Miracle on the Hudson" in USA Today. It was just a superb action story. Then I went to half the bookstores in town and couldn't find it. And I haven't heard a word about it since.

    How do you figure? Somebody, including both the publisher and the media, just dropped the ball. You can bet some Hollywood producer will find it and run.

    This is a nuanced, real-life nonfiction story that reads like a contemporary action novel. I don't think I've ever read a book like this. With the passengers baring their souls and their fears, the writers wove the real story of what it must be like to be inside a doomed, crashing airplane. Despite the gush of publicity last year, this is all new because somebody finally put the whole inside-the-airplane story together. It's touching. It's tearful. It's like no airplane drama I ever read. And it's redemptive.

    Where do you get characters like these except in real life:

    A successful businessman, one of those 100,000-mile fliers, sitting at a window seat next to a terrified mother holding a 9-month-old baby. He has already written himself off as dead. But he spends his "last minutes" calming the mother. Later, he admits, "I was pathologically lying the whole time."

    A husky ex-combat Marine who has to assure his seatmate she is not in heaven (and he is not an angel) after the crash landing and he is trying to move her toward an escape door. Later he uses gyrene-taught rescue techniques to pull one passenger after another out of the freezing river.

    An 85-year-old grandmother who can barely walk who tells her daughter to just leave her behind after the crash with water flooding into the plane and the aisles jammed.

    A captain in the Army Airborne who just took his platoon through 15 months of Afghan combat without a death now agonizing because there is nothing he can do to get the woman next to him, his fiance, through this short flight.

    A man, after hearing Sullenberger announce "Brace for Impact," asks himself, "How do you brace for death?"

    One of the remarkable things about "Miracle on the Hudson" is that the three crucial minutes after the geese strike the plane and before the plane strikes the Hudson are carried through seven or eight chapters because the authors are able to weave in and out of the minds and souls of the 100-plus very different passengers they interviewed.

    Sullenberger is a true modern hero and every time he hiccuped he got more publicity and sold more copies of a decent but average book.

    Apparently, the survivors of the flight formed a limited corporation, agreed they wanted a warts-and-all story done. They found a publisher and writers to get their inside-the-airplane story told. They missed on one choice.

    My recommendation: Buy the book anyway before they stop printing them. This kind of story doesn't come much better.

    James Candorst


    More Customer Reviews