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Flight 232: A Story of Disaster and Survival
Flight 232: A Story of Disaster and Survival | Laurence Gonzales
3 posts | 4 read | 1 to read
As hundreds of rescue workers waited on the ground, United Airlines Flight 232 wallowed drunkenly over the bluffs northwest of Sioux City. The plane slammed onto the runway and burst into a vast fireball. The rescuers didn't move at first: nobody could possibly survive that crash. And then people began emerging from the summer corn that lined the runways. Miraculously, 184 of 296 passengers lived. No one has ever attempted the complete reconstruction of a crash of this magnitude. Drawing on interviews with hundreds of survivors, crew, and airport and rescue personnel, Laurence Gonzales, a commercial pilot himself, captures, minute by minute, the harrowing journey of pilots flying a plane with no controls and flight attendants keeping their calm in the face of certain death. He plumbs the hearts and minds of passengers as they pray, bargain with God, plot their strategies for survival, and sacrifice themselves to save others.Ultimately he takes us, step by step, through the gripping scientific detective work in super-secret labs to dive into the heart of a flaw smaller than a grain of rice that shows what brought the aircraft down.An unforgettable drama of the triumph of heroism over tragedy and human ingenuity over technological breakdown, Flight 232 is a masterpiece in the tradition of the greatest aviation stories ever told.
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review
Amiable
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Mehso-so

Well-researched but uneven account of United Flight 232, which crashed in Sioux City, IA, on July 19, 1989, killing 112 of the 296 passengers and crew. The book seesaws between an aeronautical engineering textbook and very graphic descriptions of the casualties. Still, it‘s sobering to learn that the crash resulted from a tiny defect in a fan disk manufactured 18 years before the crash that should have been found during routine inspections.

review
rabbitprincess
Bailedbailed

The actual story of Flight 232 is interesting and deserves to be told: many safety improvements came out of this accident, as well as a demonstration of the value of crew resource management. However, in this book, the story is told in a jumbled way, and the description of injuries borders on the gratuitous. I would read the NTSB report instead.

review
catatonic1242
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Mehso-so

Half a story of survival and half a story about titanium. Half fascinating, half deadly dull.