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Once More to the Sky

The Rebuilding of the World Trade Center

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
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The powerful story of the rebuilding of the World Trade Center, featuring dozens of never-before-seen color photos by the official site photographer.
In late 2014, One World Trade Center—or the Freedom Tower—opened for business. It took nearly ten years, cost roughly four billion dollars, and required the sweat, strength, and stamina of hundreds of construction workers, digging deep below the earth's surface and dangling high in the air. It suffered setbacks that would've most likely scuttled any other project, including the ousting of a famed architect, the relocation of the building's footprints due to security reasons, and the internecine feuding of various politicians and governing bodies. And yet however over budget and over deadline, it ultimately got built, and today it serves as a 1,776-foot reminder of what America is capable of when we put aside our differences and pull together for a common cause.

No writer followed the building of the Freedom Tower more closely than Esquire's Scott Raab. Between 2005 and 2015, Raab published a landmark ten-part series about the construction. He shadowed both the suits in their boardrooms and the hardhats in their earthmoving equipment, and chronicled it all in exquisite prose. While familiar names abound—Andrew Cuomo, Chris Christie, Mike Bloomberg and Larry Silverstein, the real estate developer who only a few weeks before 9/11 signed a ninety-nine-year, $3.2 billion lease on the World Trade Center—just as memorable are the not-so-famous. People such as Bryan Lyons, a Yonkers-born engineer who lost his firefighter brother on 9/11 and served as a superintendent on the rebuilding effort. And Charlie Wolf, whose wife was killed in the North Tower and who, in one of the series' most powerful scenes, weeps on a policeman's shoulder after delivering her hairbrush and toothbrush for DNA samples.

Once More to the Sky collects all ten original pieces along with a new epilogue from Raab about what's happened in the years since the Freedom Tower was completed, and why it remains such an important symbol. The four-color book also features dozens of photos—many never-before-seen—and a prologue from photographer Joe Woolhead, the official site photographer for the World Trade Center's rebuilding.

Publishing to coincide with the twentieth anniversary of 9/11, it is a moving tribute to American resolve and ingenuity.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 16, 2021
      Journalist Raab (You’re Welcome, Cleveland) brings together 10 essays on the rebuilding efforts at the 16-acre site of the fallen Twin Towers, written for Esquire from 2005 to 2015, in this arresting tribute. “The Foundation” describes how the Freedom Tower’s footprint was forced back from the street for security reasons as the NYPD feared it was open to truck bombs, while “The Blasters” explains that underground work such as testing the bedrock and relocating the utilities could only be done between 1 and 5 a.m. so as to not interfere with the schedules of commuter trains that run near the site. Key figures come to life, too: Port Authority executive director Chris Ward comes across as “a straight-shooting leader” who got the delayed project back on track, in “Good Days at Ground Zero,” and the Freedom Tower’s architect, David Childs, sweet-talks Larry Silverstein, the World Trade Center’s leaseholder, in “The Engineers.” Though the essays occasionally rehash information (likely due to their initially being published as a magazine series), together with Woolhead’s photos, the collection presents an inspiring commentary on New York post-9/11, covering the construction efforts as well as the lives of the architects, ironworkers, and bedrock blasters behind it. Readers will be moved by this vivid collection.

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  • English

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