Higginbotham, Adam.
April 25
1986 in Chernobyl was a turning point in world history. The disaster not only changed the world's perception of nuclear power and the science that spawned it
but also our understanding of the planet's delicate ecology. With the images of the abandoned homes and playgrounds beyond the barbed wire of the 30 kilometer Exclusion Zone
the rusting graveyards of contaminated trucks and helicopters
the farmland lashed with black rain
the event fixed for all time the notion of radiation as an invisible killer.Chernobyl was also a key event in the destruction of the Soviet Union
and
with it
the United States' victory in the Cold War. For Moscow it was a political and financial catastrophe as much as an environmental and scientific one. With a total cost of 18 billion rubles at the time equivalent to 18 billion Chernobyl bankrupted an already teetering economy and revealed to its population a state built upon a pillar of lies. The full story of the events that started that night in the control room of Reactor No.4 of the V.I. Lenin Nuclear Power Plant has never been told until now. Through two decades of reporting
new archival information
and firsthand interviews with witnesses
journalist Adam Higginbotham tells the full dramatic story
including Alexander Akimov and Anatoli Dyatlov
who represented the best and worst of Soviet life; denizens of a vanished world of secret policemen
internal passports
food lines
and heroic self sacrifice for the Motherland. Midnight in Chernobyl
award worthy nonfiction that reads like sci fi
shows not only the final epic struggle of a dying empire
but also the story of individual heroism and desperate
ingenious technical improvisation joining forces against a new kind of enemy.