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Books : Society, Politics & Philosophy : Social Sciences : Sociology : Social Issues : Social Disasters : General AAS
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Drawing on aspects of both docu-drama and fairy-tale, Dominique Lapierre’s epic story of man-made disaster in India, Five Past Midnight in Bhopal, delivers its horrific account with a frank and brave intimacy. The hulking pesticide factory had been built by American multinational Union Carbide near the ancient and beautiful city of Bhopal, to take advantage of the huge untapped potential of the Indian agricultural market.
"As inoffensive as a chocolate factory" according to one American executive, this is however, no Roald Dahl tale, despite its grim twists. Instead, it’s a chemical catastrophe of devastating proportions, as a combination of slack safety, complacency and human error led to the release of deadly toxic clouds of methyl oxide that resulted in perhaps as many as 30 thousand deaths in 1984. And inevitably, when the wind blows, it does so against the poor and deprived, as it did here, with the majority of the deaths occurring in the shantytown settlements that bordered the industrial leviathan. In retrospect, a time bomb waiting to happen, the repercussions are still being felt in the lungs, eyes, cancers and deformities of those unfortunate enough to come into contact with its fallout.
Lapierre, a writer, journalist and lecturer who donates his fees to fund humanitarian work in India, chooses to construct his kaleidoscopic narrative through the threads of local lives, both prior to and after the disaster, such as the young couple Padmini and Dilip, whose wedding was interrupted by the tragedy. Colourfully translated from the French, yet retaining much of its idiomatic structures, Lapierre, the author of City of Joy, is shrewd to focus on the people, both employees, residents and bosses, as this was indubitably a very human tragedy, in all its sociological, scientific and commercial implications. Not, perhaps, a great work of literature, but scrupulously researched, engagingly accessible and a commendable pinpointing of the lives that surround and succeed an international news story. Lapierre concludes with perhaps the first moment of unguarded polemic, when a Monsanto salesman comes calling with genetically modified seeds. In the wake of such terrible affliction, Western commercial imperialism seems a ubiquitous grim reaper indeed. --David Vincent
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Meteorologists called the storm that hit North America's eastern seaboard in October 1991 a "perfect storm" because of the rare combination of factors that created it. For everyone else, it was perfect hell. In The Perfect Storm, author Sebastian Junger conjures for the reader the meteorological conditions that created the "storm of the century" and the impact the storm had on many of the people caught in it. Chief among these are the six crew members of the swordfish boat the Andrea Gail, all of whom were lost 500 miles from home beneath roiling seas and high waves. Working from published material, radio dialogues, eyewitness accounts and the experiences of people who have survived similar events, Junger attempts to re-create the last moments of the Andrea Gail as well as the perilous high-seas rescues of other victims of the storm.
Like a Greek drama, The Perfect Storm builds slowly and inexorably to its tragic climax. The book weaves the history of the fishing industry and the science of predicting storms into the quotidian lives of those aboard the Andrea Gail and of others who would soon find themselves in the fury of the storm. Junger does a remarkable job of explaining a convergence of meteorological and human events in terms that make them both comprehensible and unforgettable. --Christine Buttery
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