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Hiroshima (book)

Hiroshima is a 1946 book by American author John Hersey. It tells the stories of six survivors of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. It is regarded as one of the earliest examples of New Journalism, in which the story-telling techniques of fiction are adapted to non-fiction reporting.[1]

Author

English

1946

160 pp

940.54/25 19

D767.25.H6 H4 1989

The work was originally published in The New Yorker, which had planned to run it over four issues but instead dedicated the entire edition of August 31, 1946, to a single article.[2] Less than two months later, the article was printed as a book by Alfred A. Knopf. Never out of print,[3] it has sold more than three million copies.[1][4] "Its story became a part of our ceaseless thinking about world wars and nuclear holocaust," New Yorker essayist Roger Angell wrote in 1995.[1]

Trinity: A Graphic History of the First Atomic Bomb

List of books about nuclear issues

discusses the profound influence of Hersey's story on how nuclear apocalypse was represented throughout the early Cold War.

Patrick B. Sharp, Savage Perils: Racial Frontiers and Nuclear Apocalypse in American Culture

first edition dustjacket at NYPL Digital Gallery

Hiroshima

the August 31, 1946 Issue of The New Yorker

Hiroshima