A seventeen-year-old book blog offering book reviews and news about authors, publishers, bookstores, and libraries.
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Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Resurrection Day
October 1962 was a nerve-wracking time for most Americans but it was only much later that I learned that I probably should have been closer to “terrified” than to “nervous.” I remember well reading the headlines and short articles in my thin local newspaper about the confrontation between Khrushchev and Kennedy that was happening in Cuba . There was a sense of great danger in the articles but I don’t recall talking with anyone who really believed that Russia and the United States would actually fire nuclear missiles at each other over the incident. Of course, I was only 14 at the time and may have been spared the truth about what adults were really thinking, but subsequent release of details about the confrontation show how utterly naïve so many of us were. (I do remember one of the infamous nuclear bomb drills, the old “duck and cover” routine, at my school that week but even that didn’t really scare me since I had already experienced several of those silly things.)
What an interesting idea! I had to study the Cuban Missile Crisis more than once in college (I was an international relations major), but it still kind of gives me goosebumps to see how close it all was!
ReplyDeleteIt is a scary premise, for sure, Eva, but it kind of fizzles at a few points and becomes more of an ordinary "chase" plot. I think it could have been a lot better than it was, but it's still worth a look. I'm glad I found it.
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