Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction べいりー・ぎふぉーど・ぷらいず
Edition 20 (2018)
NonfictionHistoryPoliticsScienceSportsTravelBiographyAutobiographyArtsCurrent affairs
Winners
1 peopleThis historical nonfiction account reconstructs the Chernobyl nuclear disaster of 1986 through technical failure, Soviet secrecy, decisions on the ground, and the experience of victims. It moves beyond the explosion itself to evacuation, information control, and political consequences, showing the dangers created when nuclear technology meets state power.
The reactor explosion was a failure of technology and also a failure of a state that closed off information.
432 pages
ChernobylSoviet historynuclear accidentinformation controldisaster politics