City of Fire: Los Alamos and the Birth of the Atomic Age, 1943-1945

City of Fire: Los Alamos and the Birth of the Atomic Age, 1943-1945
ISBN-10
0131346350
ISBN-13
9780131346352
Series
City of Fire
Category
Atomic bomb
Pages
234
Language
English
Published
1978
Publisher
Prentice Hall
Author
James W. Kunetka

Description

Based upon previously classified wartime files, the complete records of the Manhattan Project, and interviews with dozens of wartime participants, City of Fire presents the complete and definitive history of Los Alamos, the scientific town created overnight by the U.S. Army to build prototype atomic bombs during World War II. With the initial test explosion of the atomic bomb in northern New Mexico on July 16, 1945, the Atom Age--indeed, the whole modern era--had begun in earnest. Now, in a book brimming with history, science, politics, and extraordinary human achievement, here is the dramatic story behind the creation of the atomic bomb. Led by the brilliant and charismatic Robert Oppenheimer, the Los Alamos Laboratory drew to its ranks the scientific giants of the age: Neils Bohr, Enrico Fermi, Edward Teller, and dozens more. Casting new light on Oppenheimer's pervasive contributions to the Laboratory and on his relationship with General Leslie R. Groves, the Director of the Manhattan Project, this book reveals the scientific squabbles that developed, as well as the unusual degree of cooperation Oppenheimer generated among his colleagues and between the scientific community and the military establishment. New insights are also shed on the roles played by such major figures as Roosevelt, Truman, and Churchill in an undertaking that provided for the unprecedented interaction of science and politics. The author recreates the unique life and work at Los Alamos--the uncertainties, difficult ires, small pleasures, and ironies--that led to the beginning of the Atomic Age. He tells how problems in the bomb's creation were overcome by vast expenditures of money and almost around-the-clock labor or nearly 7,000 men and women working in secrecy on the isolated New Mexican mesa. Work on the project went ahead despite the uncertainty of the outcome and the belief by some scientists that an atomic explosion possibly could ignite the atmosphere and destroy the world. After the war, scientists were divided between those who favored development of larger, more powerful weapons and those who felt that existing weapons were enough. Describing the historical events leading to the Trinity bomb test and to the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. City of Fire corrects many misconceptions about the greatest news story of the twentieth century. Setting the record straight, it establishes that all Los Alamos scientist were involved in the decision to use the weapon against Japan. Written in a compelling and riveting style, this is the clearest, most accurate, and most informed account to date of a major scientific achievement that has affected all our lives.

Other editions

Similar books

  • City on Fire: A novel
    By Garth Risk Hallberg

    City on Fire is an unforgettable novel about love and betrayal and forgiveness, about art and truth and rock ’n’ roll: about what people need from each other in order to live—and about what makes the living worth doing in the first ...

  • City on Fire: A Novel
    By Don Winslow

    New York Times Bestseller! From the #1 internationally bestselling author of the Cartel Trilogy (The Power of the Dog, The Cartel, and The Border), The Force, and Broken comes the first novel in an epic new trilogy. “Superb.

  • City on Fire
    By Walter Jon Williams

    This sequel to Metropolitan finds Constantine in control over a segment of the vast world-city that covers the globe. Aiah, his disciple and somethimes lover, continues to support the man...

  • City on Fire: the fight for Hong Kong
    By Antony Dapiran

    A long-term resident and expert observer of dissent in Hong Kong takes readers to the frontlines of Hong Kong’s revolution. Through the long, hot summer of 2019, Hong Kong burned....

  • Bird on Fire: Lessons from the World's Least Sustainable City
    By Andrew Ross

    Shaun McKinnon, “Arizona Drought Prompts Unusual Colorado River Water Proposal,” Arizona Republic (December 26, 2010). A strong La Niňa in the winter months increased the snowpack in the Upper Basin and sent higher than average flows of ...

  • The City of Fire
    By Grace Livingston Hill

    Excerpt: ... sinned against God and his better self, and had begun his eternal life on earth. It was too late ever to turn back. "All Hope abandon, ye who...

  • City on Fire: Hong Kong Cinema
    By Lisa Odham Stokes, Michael Hoover

    Moreover , Mui , seeing her daughter's wonder at a guppy in a fishbowl , alludes to increasing harbor pollution when she tells the young girl that ' once upon a time fish swam in the water . In their critique of the Hong Kong ...

  • City of Fire: Los Alamos and the Atomic Age, 1943-1945
    By James W. Kunetka

    Based upon previously classified wartime files, the complete records of the Manhattan Project, and interviews with dozens of wartime participants, City of Fire presents the complete and definitive history of...

  • Fire City
    By Bali Rai

    Within the crumbling walls of Fire City, fifteen-year-old Martha is a member of the resistance, a small band of humans fighting for freedom in a lawless and horrifying new world.

  • Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire
    By Matthew Robb

    Founded in the first century BCE near a set of natural springs in an otherwise dry northeastern corner of the Valley of Mexico, the ancient metropolis of Teotihuacan was on a symbolic level a city of elements.