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The Bomb

The Weapon That Changed the World

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the Big Bang to Hiroshima, the incredible story of the most disastrous weapon ever invented
On August 6, 1945, at 8:15 in the morning, an explosive charge of more than 15 kilotons fell on the city of Hiroshima. Tens of thousands of people were pulverized, and everything within four square miles was instantly destroyed. A deluge of flames and ash had just caused Japan's greatest trauma and changed the course of modern warfare and life on Earth forever. The world was horrified by the existence of the bomb—the first weapon of mass destruction. But how could such an appalling tool be invented? To answer this question, Alcante, Laurent-Frédéric Bollée, and Denis Rodier return to the origins of its main component, uranium, and shed light on the scientific discoveries around this element and its uses both civilian and military. Sifting through the history, from Katanga to Japan, through Germany, Norway, the USSR, and New Mexico,The Bomb is a succession of incredible but true stories. Alcante, Bollée, and Rodier have created an exhaustive and definitive work of nonfiction that details the stories of the unsung players as well as the remarkable men and women who are at the crux of its history and the events that followed.
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    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2023
      A graphic history of the original weapon of mass destruction. A team of French writers and artists frames this history of the atomic bomb by means of an unexpected narrator: uranium, present as Earth solidified billions of years ago but possessed of "an inkling that a great destiny awaited me." The narrative leaps forward to the age of the Curies, who divined hidden powers in the element, which then declares, "The world's greatest scientists are interested in me and my attributes. My day is dawning." Many of those scientists worked for the Axis powers, which used their military might to secure uranium around the world. As one Japanese military leader remarks to a scientist named Dr. Nishina, "Lieutenant Colonel Suzuki has assured me that Japan has plenty of uranium thanks to our actions in Korea." Via a European mine owner in Africa, though, a large quantity of uranium was shipped to, of all places, Staten Island, and Allied scientists began to work on it even as Norwegian commandos set to work blowing up German water facilities. The illustrations are deep-dark black-and-white, in keeping with the funereal consequences of the subject matter, with grimly detailed attention to the appearances of the victims of Hiroshima, including the iconic shadow left on a stone step by a vaporized victim. The storyline is well rendered, with the principal actors developed thoroughly and with all their foibles: Enrico Fermi's arrogance, Robert Oppenheimer's philandering, Gen. Leslie Groves' hunger for fame and power. The authors and illustrator leave open numerous unresolved historical questions, appropriately, such as the matter of whether Werner Heisenberg deliberately delayed the development of the Third Reich's version of the bomb. The story ends with uranium crowing about the prospects for the future--and they're appallingly good. The illustrations are chilling, the narrative certainly so, all perfectly fitting the subject.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 17, 2023
      This exhaustively detailed account of the race to build the first nuclear weapons opens in 1933 with Hungarian Jewish scientist Leo Szilard’s theory of the nuclear chain reaction and ends with the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima in 1945. Alcante (the Pandora’s Box series), Bollée (London Inferno), and Rodier (the Superman series) highlight the key players in the various countries attempting to produce a usable weapon. In 1939, both Nazi Germany and the United States form working groups of scientists to tackle the problem, followed quickly by the United Kingdom, the U.S.S.R., and Japan. The sprawling cast includes Leslie Groves, the volatile U.S. Army officer overseeing the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, N.Mex.; the eccentric physicist Robert Oppenheimer; and Soviet spy Klaus Fuchs, as well as more unexpected figures, including anonymous and unwilling Black American test subjects (injected with plutonium) and a father in Hiroshima. Much space gets devoted to dense scientific debates, but heightened action sequences—British agents sabotaging Nazi efforts in Norway, kamikaze pilots preparing for battle—supply tension. The accomplished and realistic black-and-white comics art excels at capturing consternation in angry faces—and the sections narrated ominously by uranium itself are a successful flourish. History buffs should take a look.

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