#whenthedustsettles – Lucy Easthope
#hodderbooks
#jonathanball
‘I’m always struck by how fine the line between catastrophe and the rest of the world can be.’ (2)
The author, based in the UK, is a world leading authority on recovering from disasters. This intimate memoir does not only take the reader behind the police tape on scenes of destruction, but also into briefing government briefing rooms and planning sessions. When the dust settles, after earthquakes, fires, floods, explosions, mass killings, pandemics, nuclear incidents, mining disasters, chemical attacks, plane crashes and volcanic eruptions, she must be there, to assess, to recover, to identify and to rebuild; to assist with the long-term recovery of communities. Amongst others the reader is taken behind the scenes of 9/11; the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami; the 7/7 bombings; the Christchurch earthquake, the inferno caused by the so-called ‘ghost train’ in Québec, 2013, the Grenfell fire and the Covid 19-pandemic.
Although the focus is on her career, she also shares intimate details of her personal life; miscarriages, her lifelong battle with dyspraxia and her husband’s health challenges (an atypical type of Mėnière’s disease) and the reminder ‘The hardest part of working in disaster in going home…. Refocusing your brain on small talk and a grocery list. Steadying your nerves when you reach for a household object – a toothbrush, a pen – the brand that you’ve seen in the wreckage.’ (14)
She frankly discusses the aftereffects of such horrific events, revering to the Welsh word ‘hiraeth’; meaning ‘a longing for a place to which there is no return, an echo of something that can never be found, a heartsickness for something that no longer exists and a time that can never be gone back to.’ (124). She concludes: ‘We can take reasonable measures to keep ourselves safe, but my work has also made me realized that every day without Armageddon is a good day.’ (150) and ‘We also have a tendency to notice the bad coincidences but not the infinite number of good coincidences that happen in equal magnitude to us every day.’ (187)
Despite the bleak subject matter, this book is a beacon of hope in an ocean of despair, a reminder of the resilience of the human spirit. It is written in a conversational style and is recommended for readers interested in the dynamics of global disaster management.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
#Uitdieperdsebek
Jonathan Ball Publishers