Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
#Chernobyl
review
Brooke_H
post image
Pickpick

Me: I know everything about Chernobyl now. I'm like an expert.

16yo: Tell me the names of all the people who were involved.

Me: ...Um...Russian names...a lot of them...

Suet624 😂😂😂😂 3w
20 likes1 comment
review
Bookish_Gal
Pickpick

Audio. Difficult to listen to, with technical verbiage. This was a very educational experience either way. As such, I think I learned more about the downfall of the USSR after the meltdown. What I did not know was focused upon how the government handled it afterwards. Like how the families were prosecuted. How the meltdown indirectly could be said to have caused the down fall of the Soviet Union due to the payout to the families.

review
Ephemera
post image
Pickpick

Dark tourism is the exact opposite of normal tourism. The author here prefers this kind of travel, though most people shun it. He grew up in Beirut so is familiar with life in the middle of chaos. In this book he tells us about his trips to such places as Iran (for the skiing), Chernobyl, North Korea, Cambodia and Beirut. He even discovered that Osama bin Laden was a student at his old school. Entertaining and affecting. Four stars

review
Booksbymybed
post image
Pickpick

Finally I‘ve read this very important book. So much sorrow from each tale, each personal tragedy. From the inability of humanity to learn and get better. Almost 40 years passed and we are no better off.

blurb
LatrelWhite
post image

In our world there are always untold stories things in the past we don‘t want to believe or we feel a certain about, but it‘s our world our history. This book is another like my previous post (Stamped from the Beginning) history we need to embrace the good the bad and the ugly.

fredthemoose This just came in for me from the library! 1y
LatrelWhite @fredthemoose This is this months pick from a Bookclub on Instagram by an actress I just love she started it a yr ago #feedyourmindbookclub this was really a great pic I probably would have never read this even though I always wanted to to the read details about Chernobyl. It‘s very informative and sad. I‘m almost done.😔 1y
hefau I couldn‘t put this down when I got it. I watched the HBO miniseries Chernobyl afterward, and they complemented each other very well. 1y
15 likes1 stack add3 comments
blurb
LatrelWhite
post image

Early in the morning of April 26, 1986, Reactor Number Four of the Chernobyl Atomic Energy Station exploded, triggering history‘s worst nuclear disaster. In the thirty years since then, Chernobyl has become lodged in the collective nightmares of the world: shorthand for the spectral horrors of radiation poisoning. #feedyourmindbookclub

blurb
JuliaTheBookNerd
post image

#Disaster ☢️ #BookBinge 📚❤️📚

#BookNerd 🤓💙📚

Eggs Well chosen, sounds good 1y
Maggie_Reads Oh wow, that sounds interesting…🧐 1y
dragondrool Such an amazing book. 1y
59 likes3 stack adds3 comments
review
OrangeMooseReads
post image
Pickpick

Excellent look into the accident at Chernobyl. I always forget that there were multiple reactors and it was only one, reactor 4, that failed/melted down.
Of course in classic bureaucratic fashion they blamed the workers and not the shoddy construction and inadequate materials used. They also ignored the multiple safety concerns.
The devastation that this caused is unreal.

blurb
OrangeMooseReads
post image

Up next.
Man Cub, my parents, and I were talking about Chernobyl the other night because of a clue on Jeopardy Masters tournament and it was a segment on the show ‘Mysteries at the Museum‘ the artifact was a ginger counter.
Too many signs pointing me to this book 😆

Sharpeipup Chernobyl was a question at my pub trivia this week. It‘s a great book! 2y
Amiable Fantastic read! 2y
46 likes2 comments
blurb
DarkMina
post image
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Excellent 💛📚 2y
Eggs Oh I need to read this 2y
SamAnne I keep meaning to get to this one! 2y
DarkMina @SamAnne I really liked it. 2y
15 likes1 stack add4 comments