I recently read the book "The 9/11 Report" by Sid Jacobson and Ernie Colon, and it was terrible because it was not organized well. This book is a graphic representation of the unfortunate events that took place on September 11, 2001. Two major themes in this book are terrorism and failures by the U.S. from 1979-2001. The first theme was terrorism. The authors use a lot of evidence in the book about terrorism and what the causes and the effects are. The second major theme was that the U.S. did a poor job on safety and security from 1979-2001. Federal agencies like the FBI, CIA, and the FAA were not talking to each other about the information they had.
The book starts with a description of what happened during the 20 year period before September 11th concerning terrorists groups like Al Qaeda. The Persian Gulf War in the early 1990’s was one of the reasons Al Qaeda formed. The U.S. was fighting in the war so they had an army base in Saudi Arabia. Osama Bin-Laden was the head of the Al Qaeda terrorist group. One reason why Al Qaeda had a lot of weapons was because Osama Bin-Laden had a lot of money. Osama Bin-Laden was not happy with Americans being in Saudi Arabia because he thought American culture did not belong there.
The next event that lead up to 9/11 was a van that was planted with a bomb in the garage of one of the twin towers in 1993. Then in 1998, Al Qaeda bombed the U.S embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The authors show enough evidence to get the reader to realize that Al Qaeda hated the U.S. One of the last terrorist attacks leading up to 9/11 was in October of 2000. In 2000, Al Qaeda bombed a USS Cole ship and killed and wounded many people.
After the authors describe what happened before 9/11, they write about the specific actions that took place on that day. There were four planes heading for The White House, The Pentagon, and each of the Twin Towers. The first plane hit one twin tower. The explosion killed all of its crew and passengers on the plane as well as people in the offices above the 92nd floor. Fourteen minutes later another plane hit the second twin tower killing everyone on board and many people in the building. Later, a plane struck one corner of the Pentagon killing and injuring many people. The last plane was scheduled to crash into the White House, but the passengers took over the plane from the hijackers and crashed in a field in Pennsylvania.
The end of the book summarizes all the things the U.S. could have done better from 1979-2001. The 9/11 Commission reported that there were four main failures that took place, which were failures in policy, in imagination, in capabilities, and in management. Failure in policy meant that the U.S. had too many army bases in Saudi Arabia, as opposed to spreading army bases across the Middle East. Failure in imagination meant that people were not thinking about the different ways terrorists could attack. Failure in capabilities meant that the U.S. was capable of doing actions that might have prevented 9/11 from happening, like having more air marshals, giving the President many different options to deal with the terrorists, and the FAA taking more aggressive security measures. Failure in management meant that all the information was known but because different people had different parts of the information, they didn’t put the pieces of the puzzle together.
I instantly knew this book wasn't right for me. One reason why I didn't like this book was because there was no organization, which meant it was hard to know what text bubbles came first (because this is a graphic novel). Also, I felt like the authors tried so hard to make a report into a graphic novel. Perhaps, the book should have just been a report or a regular chapter book.
One thing I found interesting about this book was the couple of pages where the authors talk about the Taliban/Al Qaeda. I also thought that the artwork in the book was good because it gave a good visual representation. I would recommend this book for non-fiction/graphic novel readers. I would suggest that if you read this book, you should be at least over 13. I am almost 13 and parts of this book were very difficult and confusing. Overall I would give this book a two out of ten mostly because of the organization.