Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Research shows broiler chickens may range more in silvopasture
Michigan Dairy Farm of the Year owners traveled an overseas path
Kentucky farmer is shining a light on growing coveted truffles
Farmer sentiment drops in the  latest Purdue/CME ag survey
Chairman of House Committee on Ag to visit Springfield Feb. 17
U.S. soybean delegates visit Egypt to discuss export markets
Farmers shouldn’t see immediate impact of ban on foreign drones
Women breaking ‘grass ceiling,’ becoming sole operators of farms
Kentucky 4-Hers shine at North American International Livestock Expo
Pesticide complaints have stabilized says IDOA Director
Farmers given tips to lower costs during the Purdue Top Farmer event
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
What happens in just one day makes for powerful reading

“One Day: The Extraordinary Story of an Ordinary 24 Hours in America” by Gene Weingarten Copyright 2019, Blue Rider Press $28, 384 pages

What did you do the last Tuesday in July?

For that matter, what did you do yesterday? If you’re like most people, you have to stop and think or consult a calendar, reconstruct your day or mentally retrace your steps. So where were you yesterday or last week or three Wednesdays ago – or, as in the new book One Day by Gene Weingarten, where were you on Dec. 28, 1986?

While kicking around concepts with a friend one night, Weingarten stumbled upon a book idea: why not take a random day from the years 1969 to 1989, and really dig into the dimensions of it, from the point of view of people who lived it? His friend liked the idea and so they literally had the date picked out of a hat.

The day they got – Dec. 28, 1986 – couldn’t have been a worse choice. It’s the least news-active time of year in a year that seemed rather uneventful. How could Weingarten tell a story if nothing ever happened?

Ah, but author John D. MacDonald died on that day.

With that one fact as launching point, Weingarten begins at midnight in Virginia, as a surgeon gets out of bed in the middle of the night to perform a heart transplant and save a woman’s life. It’s something good that came from something very bad.

At 5:35 a.m., an iconic weather vane disappeared from a campus cupola in Rhode Island. Ten minutes later, at a Tennessee sleepover, an 11-year-old girl defied her mother by playing a video game, one that resonated years later when the girl’s own daughter was 15. At 6:30 a.m., a newlywed in Arizona wrote in her diary about her already-failing marriage; five minutes after that, a woman’s broken body was found beneath a bridge in California. In Maryland that day, two men died of AIDS but only one admitted it. Not long after 8 a.m. in Iowa, a man spent his birthday breakfast thinking about his marriage; and before 6 o’clock that evening, a Washingtonian encountered not one, but two brushes with death, and survived.

Sixty seconds, times sixty minutes, times twenty-four hours leaves a lot of time to alter an outcome and change a life forever. In One Day, you’ll get a round-the-clocks’ worth of significant-for-someone events, and more.

The “more” is here because author Gene Weingarten is a Pulitzer prize-winning news writer, and these stories prove why: they have the feel of a long-form feature, the kind you love to relax with on a Sunday morning; the kind that introduce you to someone who, at the end of the article, you’ll feel like you know. Sometimes, you might know too much as each chapter twists up and back again with humor and a lightly-Hitchcockian tension that makes such tales so compelling and sympathetic and heart-grabbing.

The worst part about this book? Much like a truly memorable vacation, One Day just doesn’t last long enough. It makes you want to read more.

 

Terri Schlichenmeyer has been reading since she was 3 years old and never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a prairie in Wisconsin with two dogs, a handsome redhead, and 16,000 books.

11/1/2019