Fascinating Read.
For starters, I know nothing about steel workers/ironworkers so when I first came across this book, I thought "What can you really say about steel that would fill even a short book" but I was curious enough to order the free sample anyway. I was rather amused as I figured I'd open the sample pages to see either something ridiculously obvious such as "Steel is very heavy and hard..." or else something to do with calculations and math that I wouldn't understand anyway. I was wrong!
What I found instead is a quite fascinating and very informative book that spans back well over a hundred years until after the World Trade Center attack on 9/11/2001. It covers several geographic locations including Newfoundland, Quebec, New York City, Chicago and California. And it describes the various cultures and their involvement as they work on various projects such as bridges and the beginnings of skyscrapers in Manhattan.
I learned that it was not at all uncommon for the men in families to follow each other into the trade going back several generations just as in other jobs where a father might be a firefighter as he marries and starts his family. Then his son decides to go into it beginning as a junior firefighter and years later, a grandson or granddaughter follows. And similar to some other professions, these folks spend many hours together, form a bond that is critical in terms of knowing there is someone that "has your back" just as you have theirs.
I say "critical" because working high up on steel beams, fitting and connecting them together once the cranes lift them up to you, anything could happen --and back then especially it did. Sometimes a worker would reach out a little too far or leave something behind accidentally on a beam they'd been working on and someone else could come along and trip. Men lost fingertips, limbs, the ability to walk ever again, broken bones and lives. I personally can't imagine it but many wouldn't use any safety harnesses and truly seemed to have no fear a hundred or more feet in the air or high up spanning a bridge with steel cables.
In addition, the book covers some moments of crisis or disasters such as the collapse of a huge bridge in Quebec early on and the aforementioned attacks and subsequent collapse of the WTC Twin Towers. Weather can be a factor as you can probably imagine. Wind can be bad at ground level so I can only imagine what it might be like 120 feet up in the air standing unprotected on a beam only a few inches wide. Or during a rain storm due to rain making the surface of steel quite slippery.
I enjoyed this book and it held my attention easily despite it being a little repetitive here and there. Would definitely recommend.