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Table of Contents
About The Book
On New Year's Eve 1972, Mark James Robert Essex, a 23-year-old former Navy seaman, began a calculated assault on the New Orleans police that would leave nine dead, ten wounded, and a city forever changed. What drove this quiet young man from small-town Kansas to wage a one-man war against an entire police force?
Peter Hernon, who covered the siege as an Associated Press reporter, spent over a year investigating this shocking story. Through extensive interviews and previously unpublished material, he reconstructs both the terrifying 11-hour hotel siege and the tragic transformation of Mark Essex—from a "happy-go-lucky" youth in Emporia, Kansas, to an embittered gunman consumed by rage.
The book alternates between the chaos of that January week—when hundreds of police officers, Marine helicopters, and volunteer gunmen battled a lone sniper while the Howard Johnson hotel burned around him—and Essex's journey through systematic racism in the U.S. Navy that left him, in Hernon's words, "a casualty of history."
This is more than a true crime narrative. It's a powerful examination of how persistent injustice can transform an ordinary person into an instrument of violence, and a sobering meditation on alienation in America. As The New York Times noted, Hernon's account "reads as fluently as a novel" while raising profound questions about society's responsibility for those it pushes to the breaking point.
A meticulously researched, compellingly written account of one of the most violent attacks on police in American history—and the broken system that created a killer.
Product Details
- Publisher: Garrett County Press (February 8, 2005)
- Length: 304 pages
- ISBN13: 9781891053481
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Raves and Reviews
"A Terrible Thunder relates the story of Essex and his weeklong siege on New Orleans in a graphic, compelling narrative. The account is a moving document that captures the mayhem and chaos that surrounded the event and the stark terror of the victims. Moreover, Mr. Hernon has dug deeply enough into Essex's background to portray him as something more than the psychotic cipher we might easily assume he was—and to illuminate some of the possible motives that led to the tragedy. Mr. Hernon's account of Essex and his final, violent debacle is handled skillfully and with balance. It reads as fluently as a novel."
– Mel Watkins, The New York Times
On December 31, 1972, revelers gathering in downtown New Orleans for the New Year's celebration found themselves running for cover as a sniper opened fire. The shooter targeted police officers, killing several over the following week before a final showdown on the roof of a hotel, where he was killed. Journalist Hernon's 1978 title unfurls the story of sniper Mark James Essex, a U.S. Navy veteran who declared war on white society. A solid title for true-crime collections.
– Library Journal
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Book Cover Image (jpg): A Terrible Thunder
Trade Paperback 9781891053481

