I can tell you right now that this will be in my top books of the year, but man, the struggle I had with this.
As a Kingston native, this book is filled with landmarks I've known my whole life. I can envision every turn, every street, and every blink of the towers. I can vividly remember, the early days of Facebook, being home from college just days before Christmas and seeing pictures of the ash spill being posted by friends. The ash spill is very much a lived experience for me, so this book felt so real and made me so angry. Oh the rage I felt towards TVA in this book...
ON THE FLIP SIDE. My dad worked for Watts Bar Nuclear plant for 30+ years, so TVA is very much a positive part of my life as well. I can't deny that as much as I KNOW how evil TVA is (especially after reading this), it is so hard for me to separate that TVA from the one who I knew for so many years. I kept telling myself, "Dad worked for Watts Bar! Not Kingston! The bad guys were the Jacobs Group! Not TVA!" Because *so many* things I enjoyed in life were because of TVA, not my mother's teaching salary. My dad's career with TVA (and obviously my parents' financial planning) paid for my first car, paid for college, paid for every vacation we ever went on, put food on the table, and so on. My version of TVA was a great, long career for my wonderful father who didn't have a college degree and afforded me a good life. It's so hard to separate the two in my brain.
When it comes to the book itself, I truly think it was very well-written. I listened to the audiobook, often on my way to work, and it always felt so odd to drive over the 1-40 bridge by the smoke stacks while listening to a book about the very thing. (If you're from Kingston, you grew up saying "No, not KingsPORT. KingsTON. The one with the smoke stacks!" They're a part of our DNA.) I think the narrator was fantastic, and I was able to forgive his pronunciation of Maryville, since no one from outside of the area will ever say it right. But his pronunciation of LaFollette was unforgivable. Absolutely unforgivable. OTHER THAN THAT, I would highly recommend the audiobook for this one because I just think it was solid.
This was the kind of non-fiction that really made you feel for the people involved, and it's going to stick with me for a very long time.