
Atoms and Ashes
From Bikini Atoll to Fukushima
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Narrated by:
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Leighton Pugh
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By:
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Serhii Plokhy
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
In 2011, a 43-foot-high tsunami crashed into a nuclear power plant in Fukushima, Japan. In the following days, explosions would rip buildings apart, three reactors would go into nuclear meltdown and the surrounding area would be swamped in radioactive water. It is now considered one of the costliest nuclear disasters ever. But Fukushima was not the first, and it was not the worst....
In Atoms and Ashes, acclaimed historian Serhii Plokhy tells the tale of the six nuclear disasters that shook the world: Bikini Atoll, Kyshtym, Windscale, Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima. Based on wide-ranging research and witness testimony, Plokhy traces the arc of each crisis, exploring in depth the confused decision-making on the ground and the panicked responses of governments to contain the crises and often cover-up the scale of the catastrophe.
As the world increasingly looks to renewable and alternative sources of energy, Plokhy lucidly argues that the atomic risk must be understood in explicit terms, but also that these calamities reveal a fundamental truth about our relationship with nuclear technology: that the thirst for power and energy has always trumped safety and the cost for future generations.
©2022 Serhii Plokhy (P)2022 Penguin AudioThe writer, being Ukrainian, is openly prejudice when dealing with the, then, USSR. All the countries and institutions, where the incidents happened, were reluctant to part with or were withholding information but only in the case of Chernobyl was this done maliciously, according to the writer. In case of the other countries, all western, it was justified, according to the writer.
I also did not like the comparison between Chernobyl and Fukushima. It sounds childish, like a competition, and probably not accurate.
The writer was not a member of the inner circle of the USSR, probably getting his statistics from western reports which, with all possibility, were puffed up against the Soviets. Meanwhile, the Fukushima casualties statistics must be hugely inaccurate as only the immediate area was taken into account but in reality the entire world was effected by the contaminated water being released into the ocean.
IN A GIST : It is a good read of the accounts of how the disasters started, were tackled and brought to an end, BUT, everything else mentioned in the book I take as hearsay.
A BIT PREJUDICE.
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Anyone who has read the History of a Tregedy book will recognise the recurring characteristics of complacency and secrecy. More than once I found myself listening with my head in my hands.
Leighton Pugh once again narrates, lending his calm, measured and compelling voice to the book. Russian and Japanese names and locations are accurately pronounced, aiding the intelligibility of the text.
Compelling, horrifying and clear-sighted
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If you're looking for a more technical book, James Mahaffey's Atomic Accidents is probably a better option for you (I certainly enjoyed that more; it covers the wild west early days as well, which are some of the more interesting times).
This book has a different focus, but a good portion of covers Chernobyl, which Plokhy covers in far more detail in his book Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy, which I'd probably recommend over this one as it goes into more detail
Enjoyable, but less technical than I hoped
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Disaster
Suspense
Aftermath
Scary parts
Nuclear physics
Politics
Government wrong decisions
Political failure
History of the Soviet Union and British Empire Colliding with the United States of America to produce an amazing fact
Absolutely amazing, I would highly recommend It
From user
SO!
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