"One of the best things about this book is that it seeks to uncover what some in power have tried to bury."—US Review of Books
"Pritikin’s compelling series of testimonies from the Hanford plaintiffs greatly enhances our understanding of the lived experience and human cost of nuclear weapons development and testing."—Pacific Historical Review
"This book intersects with disability studies and with the history of medicine’s patient narratives to join the relentless literature about the contamination found at every step of nuclear technology."—Isis
"A must read for anyone interested in understanding the impacts of nuclear production and the ways our nuclear history has been shielded from public consciousness."—H-Net Reviews
“The Hanford Plaintiffs will be a resource for scholars seeking to better understand the atomic West, and particularly how Hanford’s “:slow motion disaster” played out in people’s bodies.”—Western Historical Quarterly
“This is a history that demands reading. Highly recommended.”—Choice
“Through the unrelenting efforts of Pritikin and her colleagues, twenty-four of the Hanford Plaintiffs at last tell their stories, told in their own words, that serve as a stark warning to our world: this can happen to you.”—Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
“Offers readers a timely and valuable contribution to the project as well as a much-needed reminder of the staggering costs of nuclear secrecy.”—Undark Magazine
Pritikin does a great service in illuminating the history and the stories of both Hanford and the Nevada Test Site. . . . These raw, unfiltered stories ground the book in humanity and compel the reader through the hard facts, making for a more whole understanding of this history.”—Inkstick
“The discussion of health effects from exposure to radioactive contaminants tends to focus on acute effects—cancers and death tolls. Pritikin shows in heart-breaking detail the stockpile of health problems from exposure to radioactivity and how painfully these chronic health problems dismantle lives. A passionate and carefully researched account of the failed fight for atomic justice.”—Kate Brown, author of Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters and Manual for Survival: An Environmental History of the Chernobyl Disaster
“Given the current political climate—North Korea’s nuclear threat, the current US administration’s provocation of North Korea, the potential unraveling of Iran’s nuclear deal, and the ongoing tension between India and Pakistan—Trisha Pritikin’s The Hanford Plaintiffs is a timely addition to literature that has addressed the health harm caused by radiation exposure downwind of weapons’ production and testing sites as well as from the use of nuclear weapons in warfare; from uranium mining, milling, or transport; from nuclear power plant accidents; and from leaking nuclear waste. Pritikin’s work stands out, not only in its description of the plight of the people—called downwinders—in and around the Hanford site but also in its disclosure of the callous disregard of the US government for the innocent citizens it was supposed to protect.”—Yuki Miyamoto, PhD, associate professor of religious studies, DePaul University, and author of Beyond the Mushroom Cloud
“The Hanford Plaintiffs is an urgent book for our times. We think we know about Hiroshima and Nagasaki, on the one hand, and Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima on the other. We might imagine that these places stand for events safely consigned to the past or that the production of nuclear weapons and nuclear power are separate affairs. Now we are encountering, once again, cavalier talk about the use of nuclear weapons. The Hanford Plaintiffs opens our eyes to the reality of how the atomic age has played long-term, continuing havoc with whole communities, the environment, and democratic principles in the United States and throughout the world by presenting the life stories of the downwinders of the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, where the plutonium for the Nagasaki bomb was produced. Pritikin lays out her material methodically, providing the scientific, medical, legal, and historical components important to readers’ full understanding.”— Norma Field, PhD, professor emerita, University of Chicago, East Asian Languages and Civilizations, and author of In the Realm of a Dying Emperor: Japan at Century’s End
“The Hanford Plaintiffs is an extraordinary and unique exposé of the human results of deliberate releases of huge quantities of radioactive isotopes from the Hanford reactors and nuclear complex over many years of operation.”—Helen Caldicott, MD
“The Hanford Plaintiffs is a unique document. It is a joint effort of the plaintiffs themselves; denied their opportunity to tell their stories in a court of law, their suffering and their lives downwind had largely become invisible until now. The Hanford workers and their families and neighbors were deemed expendable by the US government in the national quest for nuclear superiority. For the first time, thanks to the work of Trisha T. Pritikin, we can meet the people who lived through this horror and hear the stories of their pain, their bravery, and their dignity.”—Robert “Bo” Jacobs, PhD, professor at the Hiroshima Peace Institute and the Graduate School of Peace Studies of Hiroshima City University, and author of The Dragon’s Tail: Americans Face the Atomic Age
“Trisha Pritikin’s compelling chronicling of the tragic suffering and deaths of the Hanford community and downwinders—the deliberate guinea pigs and sacrificial victims of the Manhattan Project’s secret development of the plutonium weapon destined for Nagasaki and of the United States’ ongoing race for global dominance in nuclear weaponry—is essential reading for all concerned with humanity and justice.
It is the pain-filled story of the lifelong battle for the health of the workers and their families in the Hanford community and the downwinds that destroyed the health and lives of many—with deaths from thyroid cancer, leukemia, brain tumors, and other forms of cancer and consequent illnesses.
A horrifying account of the consequences of the widespread radioactive fallout that contaminated the food sources, the air, and the water of the Hanford community and surrounding environs.
As I read I am alternately horrified, sickened, devastated, heartbroken, appalled, and angry at the shattered lives and the US government’s denial, rejection, and outright lies about the dangers and consequences inflicted on its citizens. I wonder how the United States considers itself a democracy when the 10th Circuit Court ruled that the government is above the law.
Trisha Pritikin, herself a victim of the shameful, cruel disregard for human lives, the deceit and duplicity of the US government—surely a crime against humanity—in this very readable account contributes to the accumulation of knowledge of the catastrophic consequences of the use of nuclear energy, whether it is manufacturing, testing, or the bombs themselves—Hanford, Nevada, the Marshall Islands, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Chernobyl, Fukushima—the list goes on.
It is a timely contribution to the current nuclear crisis in an era with potentially no nuclear treaty restraints, with all nuclear weapon states upgrading their arsenals, and with the new US nuclear war–fighting doctrine.”—Dr. Jennifer Allen Simons, founder and president, Simons Foundation
“Timely and compelling, with the experiences and voices of impacted people at its core, The Hanford Plaintiffs is one of the most important works on Hanford to date. These twenty-four oral histories coupled with Pritikin’s eloquent and accessible analysis of nuclear history, dose reconstruction science, and toxic tort law make this book essential reading for citizens and professionals alike.”—Sarah Fox, author of Downwind: A People’s History of the Nuclear West
“In The Hanford Plaintiffs, Trisha Pritikin reveals the breadth and depth of the devastating health effects of the Hanford site on local residents and the extent to which they were deceived and misled by the US government. A downwinder herself, she presents a thorough account of those whose lives were unknowingly impacted by radioactive and toxic contamination. This book is an urgent reminder of why American citizens must remain diligent and hold our government accountable for the truth we deserve regarding nuclear contamination, especially when lives were—and continue to be—at stake.”—Kristen Iversen, author of Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats
“Irradiated lambs, mysteriously paralyzed children, debilitating cancers: this is the all-too-real nightmare of America’s ‘forgotten guinea pigs,’ the Inland Northwest downwinders who have been irreparably harmed by atomic fallout. Thoroughly researched and expertly organized by Trisha T. Pritikin, this is a chilling, startling, and crucial book; no doubt its unflinching truth will inspire change.”—Sharma Shields, author of The Cassandra: A Novel