Joan Quigley first glimpsed the Centralia mine fire at age fifteen, during her grandmother’s funeral at St. Ignatius Cemetery. A former Miami Herald business reporter, she is a graduate of Princeton and of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. She is a recipient of the J. Anthony Lukas Work-in-Progress Award for this book.
“Reads like fiction but inspires outrage in the muckraking
tradition of Lincoln Steffens and Rachel Carson.”—New York
Times
“A real-life epic of brutally indifferent government, greedy
corporations, and the unlikely heroes. You’ll feel enraged to know
the truth of what happened in our mountains and proud of your
fellow Americans who took on Goliath.”—John Passacantando,
executive director, Greenpeace USA
“A thorough and often passionate account . . . The Day the Earth
Caved In shines.”—Washington Post Book World
“Fascinating . . . [an] excellent study.”—Denver Post
“First-rate research and journalism.”—Kirkus Reviews, starred
review
“It is quite a story.”— Wall Street Journal
“ Quigley’s riveting account of the nation’s most devastating mine
fire will change the way you think about so-called natural
disasters, and the emotions we attach to the places we call home.
This is an extraordinary book.” —Sean Wilentz, author of The Rise
of American Democracy
“If you can imagine a book that combines the gritty dignity of How
Green Was My Valley with the muckraking of Silent Spring, then you
have some sense of this deeply affecting work.”—Samuel G. Freedman,
author of Upon This Rock
“Joan Quigley, the granddaughter of coal miners, has combined
meticulous reporting and personal passion to bring us this
important book — one that illuminates an underground blaze that
many corporate and government officials sought to smother and
conceal.” —Gay Talese, author of A Writer’s Life
“Quigley takes this complex story involving politics, science and
history and weaves it into something that informs and
entertains.”—Lexington Herald-Leader
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