When survivors began
crawling up through the hole, I saw that things could get out of hand
quickly. I signaled for Scott to join me and went to talk to the
apparent leader.
"How many in this building?"
"I don't know, twenty-five, maybe one hundred."
More
heads popped up through the hole as I listened. We needed some control
to prevent someone from being blown off the roof and to stave off panic.
Scott was disconnecting from the hook when I realized we were not going
to be able to rescue everyone. There were just too many.
When Scott reached me I told him, "I'm going to find as many elderly and sick as possible. Find out how many we can take."
Jerry
Hoover retired from the Coast Guard in May 2006 with more deployments
than any other rescue swimmer in the history of the program. His career
ended with the greatest searchand- rescue effort in the history of
mankind, Katrina. In Brotherhood of the Fin, Jerry recounts his
transformation from ordinary Joe to seasoned life-saving veteran.
Narrow
escapes and heartbreaking life-and-death decisions are a part of every
swimmer's life. Jerry puts us in the middle of the action as we discover
how he learns to overcome the fear of his own death, put mission above
personal feelings, and live with the responsibility of being someone's
last hope. From Goodreads.
I sometimes find it scary the way disaster pulls me in and I just want to know more. Luckily this book about the birth of the Coast Guard and how it has developed since was a lot more about the rescues. I have a lot of respect for these guys both the swimmers and the rest of the crews on the rescue helicopters that goes out in any weather to save people.
This book qualifies for:
Goodreads Reading Challenge 2015
A Million More Pages Hogwarts: Dragon Nursery
A Million More Pages Hogwarts: Backpacking Around The Globe
A Million More Pages Hogwarts: The Amazing Book Race
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