The 24 Hours in Charlottesville author offers a minute-by-minute account of the January 6 riots through the never-before-heard stories of those who were there
Neus’s progressive lens goes beyond mainstream reporting to reveal important truths about racial justice and the US white nationalist movement
Drawing on the collaboration and support of Tim Heaphy, chief investigator of the U.S. Congress’s January 6 Select Committee; on exclusive access to the United States Capitol Historical Society’s oral history project on the insurrection; and on her personal contacts on the Hill, Nora Neus reconstructs what it was actually like in and around the Capitol during those 24 hours. Her narrators include high-profile politicians and maintenance workers, Capitol Hill residents and White House photographers, police officers who defended the building and insurrectionists who have since disavowed their actions.
Police officers recall the insurrectionists screaming at them and calling them traitors. Staffers remember “walking over pools of blood” as they ran for their lives. A young Asian-American staffer recalls locking herself in a room just feet from the rioters, mentally preparing to be raped. A mostly Black janitorial staff began cleaning the blood of insurrectionists off the marble floor on the Capitol before the building was even officially secured.
January 6 was a well-planned attack coordinated largely right out in the open, the threat of which lawmakers and government officials underestimated in part because it was coming from white people. Neus will examine the underlying racial implications of not only the attack itself, but also in the planning and coordination of the response.
I remember watching the January 6th insurrection happen on a live stream instead of working. I was talking with a coworker when the “rally” started to head toward the capitol building, and we continued watching for a long time, horrified and shocked, but not surprised.
Those words have been the default feeling that I have had basically every day of Trump’s presidencies.
Anyway, I remember watching live news coverage of the day. I remember watching all the speeches immediately following the day - the pretty words from Republicans who would so quickly lose the even the wet noodle they had managed to find where their backbones should be. (Trump must have some really juicy goods on them all. Either that, or mean tweets must be excruciatingly painful. I wouldn’t know, I’m not on Twitter.) And finally, I remember watching the J6 hearings.
And then I remember watching a whole lot of fucking nothing happen after that.
This book adds additional perspectives, and tells the story through a mosaic of first-hand accounts stitched together to create a narrative timeline of the day. Oral histories have become a favorite of mine, and I didn’t know that this author had also written one about Charlottesville as well. I will have to pick that up.
I really love the way that these individual stories all link and blend together to create a full picture of the event. It does so much to really make the reader (or in my case, listener) feel like they are there. Of course, I have as much history and knowledge about the day as background as I could have without having actually been there, or one of the investigators directly. That does help, and I was able to picture the faces and scenes being described as they were playing out via audio. Officer Hodges being crushed in the doorway, screaming for help. Officer Goodman leading the rioters away from the Senate chamber. So many scenes are viscerally imprinted on my brain from the footage of events that day, and this book added still more context and detail around them.
And it added details that I had shamefully overlooked. Like the focus on the elected officials being brought to safety (and their families), but staffers and assistants and other regular employees being told to barricade themselves in and hide. I cannot imagine how scary that would have been, to just be abandoned and left to fend for one’s self while armed and murderous insurrectionists are storming the building looking for “the enemy” - which was apparently anyone not actively aiding their cause.
As I write this, it is a little after 1am on January 11th, 2026. Less than a week after the 5 year anniversary of this day. Trump is president again. His first day in office, he pardoned every single person convicted of insurrection from January 6th.
This is not normal. This cannot be allowed to be normalized. This is very bad. We cannot act like this is politics as usual. We cannot allow Trump and his gestapo of ICE murderers/kidnappers/bullies to scare us into silence. We have seen this before. WE FOUGHT A WAR AGAINST THIS. Get involved. Canvass. Write postcards. Poll watch. Drive voters to the polls. Talk to your friends and neighbors and family and colleagues. If we value the democracy and constitution we claim to love, we need to fight to keep it at the ballot box.
Vital resource, instant recommendation to anyone curious about the event. Fantastic interviews, organized and edited to flow like goddamn fiction.
I knew what any layperson knew about Jan 6--the motivations (well, maybe a little more than any layperson on that, considering I got so fascinated by QAnon), the storming, the iconic photos, the one?two?idk? deaths. This really brought every detail into perfect clarity. Terrifying, honestly.
And immensely frustrating. The hundreds of weapons confiscated by security who didn't choose to, yknow, be concerned? The tips ignored? The amusement park level security and barricades? Dude. The cops just lost in that crush. Genuinely surprised not more people died on the scene, and that of all of them, only one was from gunshot. Seemingly the only gun fired.
The interviewees mentioned repeatedly that the law enforcement response was in stark contrast to BLM protests the summer before. I would have appreciated something more than just "I think" and "I believe" statements on this, but that probably would have broken the format. Reason is that I just like facts, speculating is unhelpful, and also, I do think the police were right to not start shooting or using lethal force. They were right to say they were wary of starting a shootout. I guess it also exposes that the protests got so violent because of, not in spite of, how little threat the protesters posed. It was safe to bring out the rubber bullets because they knew no one would fight back.
Sigh. Exhausting book, but a fantastic one. Will definitely be looking for Neus's other book in this format.
I knew it was bad but I didn’t know how bad it actually was. I don’t usually rate non-fiction books, but I think this one needs to be read and seen by everyone.
A difficult book to review because by the end of it I was too angry to think straight. The complete lack of accountability doomed us. I cannot believe this wasn't the end. He's back in the white house and the people who condemned him are back licking his boots. Records are being purged and the narrative is being white-washed. I think having an oral history like this is indescribably important in a country where half the population barely shares reality with the other half. It's all so scary and I'm just so angry still. Last week was the five year anniversary and I didn't hear a peep.
O my goodness! I knew it was bad but not that bad. This book is so important for us to hold close to remembering the truth of what happened. Jan 6 was jaw dropping and after this book I’m still so astonished and speechless. The book said it best, “if the rioters were black there would have been hundreds dead.” But instead white people rioted, destroyed the capital and even smeared feces on the wall and black people clean it up. January 6 should not have happened.
The Publisher Says: The 24 Hours in Charlottesville author offers a minute-by-minute account of the January 6 riots through the never-before-heard stories of those who were there
Neus’s progressive lens goes beyond mainstream reporting to reveal important truths about racial justice and the US white nationalist movement
Drawing on the collaboration and support of Tim Heaphy, chief investigator of the U.S. Congress’s January 6 Select Committee; on exclusive access to the United States Capitol Historical Society’s oral history project on the insurrection; and on her personal contacts on the Hill, Nora Neus reconstructs what it was actually like in and around the Capitol during those 24 hours. Her narrators include high-profile politicians and maintenance workers, Capitol Hill residents and White House photographers, police officers who defended the building and insurrectionists who have since disavowed their actions.
Police officers recall the insurrectionists screaming at them and calling them traitors. Staffers remember “walking over pools of blood” as they ran for their lives. A young Asian-American staffer recalls locking herself in a room just feet from the rioters, mentally preparing to be raped. A mostly Black janitorial staff began cleaning the blood of insurrectionists off the marble floor on the Capitol before the building was even officially secured.
January 6 was a well-planned attack coordinated largely right out in the open, the threat of which lawmakers and government officials underestimated in part because it was coming from white people. Neus will examine the underlying racial implications of not only the attack itself, but also in the planning and coordination of the response.
I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA EDELWEISS+. THANK YOU.
My Review: A deeply, deeply disturbing book about a searing and fateful moment in US history. No one wants to think about it this way but I'll say it openly: J6 was the Fort Sumter of the white supremacist rebellion. It's approaching a new inflection point with midterms threatening to expose the lies that undergirded felonious yam's 2024 election. We can expect more violence, and with a better prepared kakistocracy in place.
You're a citizen. If you're not, you still have a stake in what happens in the country that holds the planet's future habitability in it silos and missiles. Inform youself so you will know what to pressure your government officials to oppose, prevent if possible, and agitate for serious effort to neutralize.
It was, and is, possible for angry white men to plan and execute a coup attempt and get away with it because unexamined privilege, unacknowledged dominance, is finally being challenged. At this moment, the allies at the top are fumbling issues important to the aptly-named "base" so there is a window of opportunity we can not afford to bungle our handling of.
I encourage you, since you were not there on the grounds of the United States Capitol building on the sixth of January in 2021, to read these first-hand accounts from those who were. Calling this event a riot is inaccurate, diminishing both the intent of the perpetrators and the severity of the impact of their actions. Read about the planning...took place in the open, remember...the execution of this failed Putsch, the actions of the traitors. The awful things done, the horrifying behavior.
Now realize the sitting president, in his last Constitutionally sanctioned term, has issued many pardons for these men.
Do not assume the midterm elections will proceed as usual. Sound the alarm in your community for poll-watchers to be defended...and defended against. Do not sit it out because you're tired, because you don't think "They" would dare to do that.
Did you imagine "They" would dare stage a coup attempt? Because "They" did.
Review of 24 Hours at the Capitol: An Oral History of the January 6th Insurrection 24 Hours at the Capitol is a gripping and sobering account of one of the most consequential days in modern American history. Told through oral histories, the book captures the raw immediacy of January 6th by weaving together voices from lawmakers, staffers, law enforcement, and journalists who lived through the chaos. This format gives readers an unfiltered sense of urgency and fear, while also highlighting the resilience and resolve of those who defended democratic institutions under extraordinary pressure. What makes the book compelling is its refusal to sanitize events. The testimonies reveal not only the physical danger but also the emotional toll—moments of confusion, courage, and heartbreak. The narrative structure, moving hour by hour, immerses readers in the unfolding crisis, making it feel both intimate and monumental. While the subject matter is deeply unsettling, the book succeeds in providing clarity without sensationalism. It’s not just a chronicle of violence; it’s a reminder of the fragility of democratic norms and the human cost of political extremism. For anyone seeking to understand the gravity of January 6th beyond headlines, this oral history is essential reading. Verdict: A powerful, meticulously assembled account that demands reflection and dialogue. Highly recommended for readers interested in history, politics, and the resilience of democratic institutions.
We are so deep in the shit right now, it's hard to remember a time when this wasn't our reality. This book is important. Everyone in America should know this and remember this.
"OFFICER FANONE: At one point I came face to face with an attacker who repeatedly lunged for me and attempted to remove my firearm. I heard chanting from some in the crowd, “Get his gun,” and, “Kill him with his own gun.” I was aware enough to recognize I was at risk of being stripped of, and killed with, my own firearm. I was electrocuted, again and again and again with a taser. I’m sure I was screaming, but I don’t think I could even hear my own voice."
This book reconstructs January 6th through firsthand accounts from those inside the Capitol, creating an urgent, ground-level view of a day defined by fear, confusion, and resolve. By letting lawmakers, staff, police, and journalists speak for themselves, the narrative feels immediate and unvarnished.
The strength of the book lies in its honesty. It doesn’t soften the danger or the emotional fallout, instead revealing how fragile democratic systems can be—and how much they rely on ordinary people holding the line under extreme pressure.
Thank you for this accurate recording of the heart wrenching hours of January 6. Neus did an outstanding presentation of truth. This should be read by every American. I received this book from Goodreads.
"Already, many of these documents— once freely available online— have been taken down by the Trump administration, making books like this one even more important."