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The Second Plane by Martin Amis

It's worth thinking about the title of this book for a moment. When the first plane hit on 9/11 we knew something terrible had happened. But when the second plane hit we had a quantum leap of terror — this was beyond our imagination. In this book, Martin Amis, a hugely talented wordsmith, grapples with the aftermath of 9/11. He uses both fiction and nonfiction.

He tells us how novelists felt about themselves after the planes hit. "They were playing for time. The socalled work in progress had been reduced, overnight, to a blue streak of autistic babble." Still, he rallied brilliantly, and here he imagines, in painful detail, how Mohammed Atta must have felt on the fateful morning — grim, nauseous, constipated.

Synopsis by Foyles.co.uk

Martin Amis first wrote about September 11 a week later in a piece for "The Guardian" beginning, 'It was the advent of the second plane, sharking in low over the Statue of Liberty: that was the defining moment.' And he has kept returning to September 11, in essays and reviews, and in two remarkable short stories, "In the Place of the End" and "The Last Days of Muhammad Atta". All are collected here, together with an expanded account of his travels with Tony Blair in 2007 - to Belfast, to Washington, and to Baghdad and Basra. 'We are arriving at an axiom in long-term thinking about international terrorism,' he writes: 'the real danger lies, not in what it inflicts, but in what it provokes. Thus by far the gravest consequence of September 11, to date, is Iraq ...Meanwhile, September 11 continues, it goes on, with all its mystery, its instability, and its terrible dynamism.'

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