American Ground: Unbuilding the World Trade Center by William Langewiesche

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2002
  • 224pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2002
    • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
    • Format: Hardcover, 224pp

    Synopsis

    Selected as one of the best books of 2002 by The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Boston Globe, Los Angeles Times, and Chicago Sun-Times

    Within days after September 11, 2001, William Langewiesche had secured unique, unrestricted, round-the-clock access to the World Trade Center site. American Ground is a tour of this intense, ephemeral world and those who improvised the recovery effort day by day, and in the process reinvented themselves, discovering unknown strengths and weaknesses. In all of its aspects--emotionalism, impulsiveness, opportunism, territoriality, resourcefulness, and fundamental, cacophonous democracy--Langewiesche reveals the unbuilding to be uniquely American and oddly inspiring, a portrait of resilience and ingenuity in the face of disaster.

    Annotation

    Nominated for the 2002 National Book Critics Circle Award, General Nonfiction.

    Publishers Weekly

    Langewiesche had unrestricted access to Manhattan's Ground Zero during the post-September 11 cleanup, and his triptych of articles (originally published in the Atlantic Monthly) takes readers through what became known to its denizens as the Pile, from the moment of destruction to the departure of the last truckload of rubble from the ruins a little less than nine months later. He gives a calm, precise account of the air traffic controllers trying to understand what was happening to the hijacked planes and explains precisely how the towers collapsed. The stars of the rest of this story are people one doesn't usually read about: administrators, engineers and construction workers in charge of the cleanup-a process in which, as Langewiesche describes it, order emerged from chaos by the sheer force of will of those in charge. One such outsize personality is David Griffin, a demolition expert who drove up from North Carolina, bluffed his way onto the restricted site, and quickly wound up in a position of authority. There's also a frank account of the tensions between police and firefighters at Ground Zero. Most fascinating, though, Langewiesche takes readers right inside the smoking Pile, as he joins workers on dangerous underground expeditions to see whether the slurry walls that keep out the Hudson will hold, or whether freon might be leaking from underground refrigerators. This is a genuinely monumental story, told without melodrama, an intimate depiction of ordinary Americans reacting to grand-scale tragedy at their best-and sometimes their worst. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    William Langewiesche is the author of three previous books, Cutting for Sign, Sahara Unveiled, and Inside the Sky. He is a correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, where this book originated as a three-part series.

    Customer Reviews

    'American Ground' unsteady footingby Anonymous

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    February 18, 2004: William Langewiesche's account of the months of clean-up efforts at Ground Zero has been described as an honest, 'clear-eyed' account about the nine months after September 11 in downtown Manhattan. Langewiesche received access at the Trade Center after faxing an inquiry to Kenneth Holden, one of two Department of Design and Construction officials Langewiesche would later turn into the main characters of his book. Holden, according to Atlantic, 'was an avid reader of The Atlantic Monthly and a fan of Langewiesche's writing in particular (he had bought and read Langewiesche's books).' Langewiesche's reporting methods have resulted in many questions and challenges to the veracity of American Ground; As a journalist, I work as part of a group investigating Langewiesche's methods and the results of his work on American Ground. Regarding probably the most controversial scene describing the looting of blue jeans, at his interview on tour at the South Street Seaport Museum in NYC, Langewiesche said he was 'writing about construction workers reactions, not what actually happened,' and that as for the facts of what did or did not happen, he is 'entirely unsure.' Why is he entirely unsure? Because he wasn't there. But when you read the passage, it sure sounds like he was there, even if he is 'entirely unsure,' if what he wrote was fact or rumor. The book is filled with ambiguity about sourcing (an earlier edition of the story, a published, uncorrected proof of the book names the field superintendent and attributes the quote to him instead of a group of construction workers). The jeans story reveals the sort of problems found throughout the book. Specific charges of plagiarism in American Ground have remained unanswered by The Atlantic Monthly. Take the story of Betty Ong, for instance. American Ground has made serious allegations about the last moments of not only firefighters, but also Ms. Ong, who was a flight attendant aboard American Flight 11. 'In terrified tones, gasping for air, Ong reported the hijacking,' Langewiesche wrote, quite a contrast from the absolute calm heard when the tapes with her voice on them were played before the Sept. 11 Commission recently. Where did Langewiesche get this incorrect information? From a Wall Street Journal article, which was never sourced in the book. Those who have protested Langewiesche's specific factual errors in 'American Ground' have been characterized as people who are 'upset by plain talk,' the kind of people who just want a good, heroic picture to be painted of the firemen, no matter what the facts. This is misleading. The people who protested did so against specific allegations for which there was no proof. People will believe what they want to. It's hard to do so when confronted by the facts. But for some people, it must be harder still to admit that you're wrong and make corrections. And blindly cheering for whatever 'heroes,' the television media throws at you is just as bad as cheering for whatever 'anti-heroes,' that the magazine and book publishers counters with.

    Facts are incorrectby Anonymous

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    November 07, 2003: Before you get enamored by the author's attempt to knock the heroes of 9/11, realize that this book is shoddy journalism. As stated by the WTC Living History Project Group: 'Rigorous research has found no objective factual basis for supporting Langewiesche?s three stories of looting and, moreover, that no fact-checking of details--beyond several nameless eyewitness accounts--was done by Langewiesche, Atlantic Monthly or Farrar Straus. This is a complete contradiction to their numerous statements to the press that ?every word? was fact-checked, and that Langewiesche?s ?sourcing is impeccable.? In sum, objective evidence shows there were no blue jeans in the firetruck and no jeering construction workers. See the site below for a thorough analysis of Langewiesche's falsehoods and urban legends: http://www.wtclivinghistory.org/introduction.htm


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