Home | Best Seller | FAQ | Contact Us
Browse
Art & Photography
Biographies & Autobiography
Body,Mind & Health
Business & Economics
Children's Book
Computers & Internet
Cooking
Crafts,Hobbies & Gardening
Entertainment
Family & Parenting
History
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Detective
Nonfiction
Professional & Technology
Reference
Religion
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports & Outdoors
Travel & Geography
   Book Info

enlarge picture

We Interrupt This Broadcast: The Events That Stopped Our Lives. . . from the Hindenburg Explosion to the Attacks of September 11  
Author: Joe Garner
ISBN: 1570719748
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review



Beginning with the explosion of the dirigible Hindenburg in 1937, this book and double-CD collection of audio broadcasts recalls a series of dramatic events so urgent that they interrupted scheduled broadcasting in America. The text of this package includes capsule explanations of such events as the attack on Pearl Harbor and the death of Elvis, accompanied by dramatic black-and-white stock photos. Introduced by the sonorous voice of TV journalist Bill Kurtis, the recordings of the news broadcasts revive the panic and thrill of some of the defining moments (mostly American) of the 20th century. This updated second edition includes three new events: the impeachment of President Clinton, the tragic shootings at Columbine High School, and the death of John F. Kennedy Jr. in an airplane crash. New recordings from the assassination of Lee Harvey Oswald, the Apollo 13 mission, and the Munich Olympics tragedy have also been added.

We Interrupt This Broadcast offers, in some ways, a strange view of the past. News that interrupts broadcasts is always sensational and usually tragic. Of the 41 recordings, only five or so don't involve assassinations, explosions, death, or defeat. Furthermore, only the deaths of Marilyn Monroe and Princess Diana represent the female side of modern events. Nevertheless, these recordings will fascinate many listeners too young to have heard the original broadcasts, and those who were alive at the time might enjoy hearing them again in all their crackling, nostalgic glory. --Maria Dolan


From Publishers Weekly
First published in 1998, this book and double-CD set documents, in text, audio and black-and-white photographs, the moments when history, for better or for worse (though usually for worse), was made in an instant. Garner's updated third edition includes segments on the 2000 presidential election reporting fiasco ("the most embarrassing election night coverage since... `Dewey Defeats Truman' ") and the events of September 11 (the collapse of Tower 2 in a "terrifying ballet of twisting, screaming metal"). In addition to the CDs' reports and sound bites dramatically introduced and explained by longtime journalist Kurtis each event gets about four pages of coverage, with an efficient summary and at least half a dozen photos. A smiling, handsome Robert Kennedy on one page becomes a mortally wounded man on the next, while on the CD, reporter Andrew West asks the senator a strategy question, and then "Senator Kennedy has been shot! Is that possible?" he cries. "Is it possible?... Oh my God... He still has the gun, the gun is pointed at me right at this moment! Take a hold of his thumb and break it if you have to!" It doesn't matter that the clips and the photos are old news: from the Hindenburg explosion to the death of Elvis, and from the crumbling of the Berlin Wall to the shooting at Columbine High, these are the kinds of moments that still shock and amaze. This moving book is "a tribute of sorts" to the events that defined eras, the journalists who reported on them and the media television, radio that made us all witnesses.Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Booklist Review
As important as the development of photography in the nineteenth century, the development of broadcasting and sound recording is hugely significant in the twentieth century, as we now can actually relive what happened during the most significant moments of our era. Garner has done a masterful job of collecting these moments, and with the accompanying CD, one can listen over and over to the moments that shaped this century. We hear about the Hindenburg disaster (announcer Herb Morrison cries, "Oh, the humanity!"), the attack on Pearl Harbor (FDR's "day that will live in infamy" speech), the JFK assassination, Neil Armstrong on the moon ("One small step for man"), and even the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. In addition, Garner has collected bits and pieces of more obscure history that will bring back memories to the older folk and offer a valuable history lesson to the young (such as the Cuban missile crisis and the death of Marilyn Monroe). In the words of Walter Cronkite, who supplies the foreword, "You are there."


Kirkus Reviews
Well-done if rather odd work. Garner, who has a lengthy background in radio and has produced a number of audio books, has now put together a mixed-media package, including both a book and two audio compact discs, documenting some of the century's most extraordinary moments as they were first described in the electronic media. Ranging from the Hindenburg disaster to the death of Princess Diana, the book and its accompanying CDs (narrated by television journalist Bill Kurtis) provide a swift, accurate, and vivid survey, likely to jog the memories of its audience. The drawback is, of course, that so many of the seminal events of the past seventy years didn't emerge as breaking news. What we are left with is not so much a record of the century's liminal moments as it is a survey of the way that the media handled particular events. Still, there's a thrill to hearing the first, often shocked or shaky announcement of John Glenn orbiting the earth, the assassinations of Martin Luther King and John F.Kennedy, Richard Nixon's resignation, the beginning of Desert Storm, and it's intriguing and instructive to follow the evolution of broadcast journalism. The fervid foreword by Walter Cronkite reminds readers of just how essential a free press has been in the evolution of the age.




We Interrupt This Broadcast: The Events That Stopped Our Lives. . . from the Hindenburg Explosion to the Attacks of September 11

FROM OUR EDITORS

To the vivid events of We Interrupt This Broadcast the editor now adds the tragic and heroic incidents of September 11, 2001, which are presented here in words, pictures, and live voice accounts. An unforgettable assemblage, this is history with the urgency of the moment.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Where Were You When?

Few phrases garner as much attention as We Interrupt This Broadcast Wherever we may happen to be, our lives stop for a moment, and we experience those few seconds of anxiety between the interruption and the actual announcement of what has happened.

In words and images and on two audio CDs We Interrupt This Broadcast brings to life the famous and infamous moments that were announced to us with those four chilling words. From the dawn of electronic media to today, from the catastrophe of the Hindenburg to the tragic events of September 11, 2001, these are the forty-three events that stopped us in our tracks and changed our world.

We Interrupt This Broadcast recounts the details of the events and spotlights the photographs that tell the stories. Accompanying the book are two digitally mastered compact discs containing over two hours of audio from the events, narrated by award-winning journalist Bill Kurtis.

These heart-stopping moments include both the famous words you remember and rare audio footage that will take you back into the magnitude of the event. Share with your friends, family, children and grandchildren your memories of where you were when the world stopped and held its breath in anticipation.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

First published in 1998, this book and double-CD set documents, in text, audio and black-and-white photographs, the moments when history, for better or for worse (though usually for worse), was made in an instant. Garner's updated third edition includes segments on the 2000 presidential election reporting fiasco ("the most embarrassing election night coverage since... `Dewey Defeats Truman' ") and the events of September 11 (the collapse of Tower 2 in a "terrifying ballet of twisting, screaming metal"). In addition to the CDs' reports and sound bites dramatically introduced and explained by longtime journalist Kurtis each event gets about four pages of coverage, with an efficient summary and at least half a dozen photos. A smiling, handsome Robert Kennedy on one page becomes a mortally wounded man on the next, while on the CD, reporter Andrew West asks the senator a strategy question, and then "Senator Kennedy has been shot! Is that possible?" he cries. "Is it possible?... Oh my God... He still has the gun, the gun is pointed at me right at this moment! Take a hold of his thumb and break it if you have to!" It doesn't matter that the clips and the photos are old news: from the Hindenburg explosion to the death of Elvis, and from the crumbling of the Berlin Wall to the shooting at Columbine High, these are the kinds of moments that still shock and amaze. This moving book is "a tribute of sorts" to the events that defined eras, the journalists who reported on them and the media television, radio that made us all witnesses. (May) Forecast: Expect the latest edition of this bestseller to attract another wave of readers and listeners, as Sourcebooks corners the market on multimedia projects. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

     



Home | Private Policy | Contact Us
@copyright 2001-2005 ReadingBee.com