Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats

Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats

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4.03 of 5 stars 4.03  ·  rating details  ·  711 ratings  ·  214 reviews
Full Body Burden is a haunting work of narrative nonfiction about a young woman, Kristen Iversen, growing up in a small Colorado town close to Rocky Flats, a secret nuclear weapons plant once designated "the most contaminated site in America." It's the story of a childhood and adolescence in the shadow of the Cold War, in a landscape at once startlingly beautiful and--unkn...more
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Published June 5th 2012 by Random House Audio
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Moira Russell
Bought this after hearing about it, because I love the West and the nuclear power stories set in it (think Desert Bloom), and especially after reading this NYTBR review. I should have remembered Dwight Garner is FUCKING USELESS when it comes to actually recommending books. Book bloggers all suck, right? Well, Garner didn't mention the prose style of this book is painfully cliched from the start (yes, of course it is written in the first person present tense, it's apparently illegal to publish a...more
John
Excellent read, illustrates how self-interest (above-average pay for the workers and production quota bonuses for the managing corporation), employee fear (of being fired), management fear (of being found out), led to the regional population surrounding this nuclear facility never asking hard questions - even as the cancers (in adults and children) mounted to abnormal levels and as scientists who reported their findings of abnormally high plutonium readings were fired. Anyone who spoke out again...more
Max Carmichael
A must-read for all U.S. citizens, this book really tells it like it is. Government, science, and industry: they all do unspeakably evil things and lie about them afterward, from Washington officials and corporate executives to county commissioners and real estate developers. Rocky Flats wasn't the first and it won't be the last. And as Ms. Iversen so poignantly shows, the perpetrators go unpunished, the damage is irreversible, the victims have no recourse, and the majority of citizens don't wan...more
Kathy
The publisher sent me this book free; otherwise, I probably never would have come across it, but I"m so glad I did! The author is a journalist and writer who just happened to also grow up in the 1970's very near Rocky Flats, which at the time was the top producer in the world of plutonium disks that activate nuclear war heads--although that's not what the government said it produced, nor did it acknowledge that shockingly large amounts of radioactive elements were regularly being dumped into the...more
Becky Trombley
"God in heaven, what have we done?" was my response to the book. Not for the feint of heart.

The residents around Rocky Flats spend decades pretending that the plutonium processing plant in the vicinity really just makes cleaning solutions, "scrubbing bubbles." The truth is too terrifying. Plus, the pay at the plant is good. You can even earn fifteen extra cents an hour for working in the "hot zone". When Iverson visits a doctor as an adult and wonders if her health condition could be connected t...more
Margaret Sankey
Read for potential to be used in my new War and the Environment class, this is a memoir of growing up in the area around Denver in a town dominated by the Dow (then Rockwell)-operated plant that made plutonium triggers for nuclear weapons and which suffered several near catastrophic accidents which (barring some purely dumb luck like a firetruck knocking out the power lines) might have obliterated Denver. While I have read more focused historical studies, having this in the form of a memoir high...more
Em
Ok, you know how in old movies the people smoke and drink constantly? You find yourself thinking, isn't it amazing what we didn't know back then? And also, aren't we lucky that we know better now?

In this true story, Kristen Iversen tells the story both of her childhood and of the Rocky Flats Nuclear weapons plant. I found myself again and again thinking, wait, this happened during my lifetime! This period that she's talking about during which plutonium was being released into streams, ground wa...more
Everyday eBook
Jan 31, 2013 Everyday eBook rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Everyday by: John Abrahams
Kristen Iversen had what many would consider an idyllic childhood, in a suburban house with avocado appliances, a horse, and parents who liked each other. Each afternoon after school, she would ride out to the edge of town. There, at the barbed wire, kicking the metal "No Trespassing" signs with the toes of her cowboy boots, she would look to the west. There: where the chinook winds came racing, swirling dust, past the eerie lights of the plant that made … something secret. In Full Body Burden,...more
Jonny99
More about growing up than nuclear shadows. Very similar to Bringing Up Bébé: One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French Parenting in that it essentially a personal memoir organized around a topic area which it revisits in the text from time to time. Iversen details her Colorado upbringing in an area dominated by a nuclear bomb factory. The "Shadow" of the subtitle is well-chosen in the sense that the installation always hovers in the background of her memories of family, horses and boys...more
Katherine
Kristen Iversen’s story of growing up in the shadow of the Rocky Flats, Colorado nuclear facility is interspersed with an indictment of the coverup that ensued as the radiation from the facility slowly poisoned the environment around it.

This is actually two books in one, the story of the author growing up in a severely dysfunctional family where no one mentioned daddy’s drinking and the story of the systematic and cold-blooded corporate irresponsibility of Dow Chemicals (the people who brought u...more
Cheryl
After conducting meticulous and solid research, Kristen Iversen has compiled an outstanding, eloquent, haunting and shocking work that should be read by each and every one of us.

Iversen’s powerful narrative interweaves the story of her family life with the story of the establishment and operation of the Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons Plant near Denver, Colorado. Kristen’s family home bordered the property on which the Rocky Flats facility was built. She exposes the secret of her father’s alcoholis...more
Susan
Having lived for more than 40 years in Colorado, but thankfully, not in the shadows of Rocky Flats, I was both interested in and woefully uninformed about what went on at this facility for producing plutonium "triggers." Now that I've read the book, I know that the "woefully unaware" part is not entirely my fault - great effort was made to keep me and everyone else unaware and misinformed.

Full Body Burden is both an expose of Rocky Flats and a memoir of someone growing up almost literally in its...more
Christina
Excellent recounting of the complexity and dangers associated with the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons manufacturing facility located just outside Denver, CO. The author grew up in a Denver suburb just two miles downwind from the site, unknowingly playing outside in plutonium-contaminated soil, air, and water. She very effectively weaves the history of the Rocky Flats site with memoirs of her own childhood and family, which was troubled by her father's alcoholism. The theme linking both narratives i...more
Kathleen Hagen
Full Body Burden: Growing up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats, by Kristin Iverson, Narrated by Kirsten Potter with the prologue narrated by Kristin Iverson herself, produced by Random House Audio, downloaded from audible.com.

Full Body Burden is a haunting work of narrative nonfiction about a young woman, Kristen Iversen, growing up in a small Colorado town close to Rocky Flats,
a secret nuclear weapons plant once designated "the most contaminated site in America." It's the story of a childhoo...more
Bonnie Brody
Be prepared to be terrified, amazed and astounded as you read this book about the Nuclear horror of Rocky Flats near Denver, Colorado. Like Los Alamos, it is a research facility, builder of plutonium triggers and this site was initiated to fight our part of the cold war. Right in the back yard of this nuclear test site and plutonium harvester, were homes where children played in the smudge of plutonium, rode horses across contaminated land, and drank water from poisoned wells.

Kristen Iversen int...more
Nancy Kennedy
Kristen Iversen's story of growing up hard by a government facility that made plutonium "triggers" for nuclear bombs is a fascinating and well-written story of both deceit and naivete.

The radioactive nightmare of Rocky Flats was forced by the government onto the booming towns of Arvada, Golden, Wheat Ridge, and ultimately Denver, Colorado. The facility had hundreds of buildings, some so contaminated you could not enter without authorization. Radioactive waste seeped into the ground, spewed into...more
Peggy
Kristen Iversen is a brave whistle blower, the Erin Brockovich of plutonium pollution. And she's a hell of a good writer, making the nonfiction account of government and corporate cover-up of Colorado’s Rocky Flats secret nuclear weapons plant activities a compelling, frightening, and personal story. She is a literary investigative reporter, weaving her family’s story with convincing scientific data that authorities ignore. She contrasts the mysterious cancer deaths of childhood friends and Rock...more
Cindy
Iversen states that in writing her memoir she had to write about her father’s alcoholism and Rocky Flats. This memoir blends together the thorough research on the history and impact of the nuclear weapons production facility with eloquent descriptions of the life Kristen had growing up. She weaves the lives of those working and living around the plant (including herself) along with her life from childhood through today in a way that makes one complete story, that has the feel of two stories. I n...more
Tom
A great story/account of a place that many around my age (and certainly younger) had no idea even existed. It is truly scary to see the cover up and lies perpetuated by our government in the name of national security, all the while having seemingly no regard for human life. And this cuts across all political sides. This was an engaging, true and at times surreal story of Rocky Flats and the devastation that did occur, almost occurred and still does occur in some families even today. Rocky Flats...more
Peg
Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats by Kristen Iversen. I was given an Uncorrected Proof of this book for review. Thank you.

Full Body Burden means the body has been exposed to its maximum amount of plutonium. Rocky Flats is the name of a plant making plutonium 'triggers' located in the Denver/Arvada, Colorado, area. This is a well-researched, fast-paced book alternating between the scary activities occurring at Rocky Flats and the author's memoir during the time she...more
Rachel
This book had quite a bit of technical and scientific information in it, but it's written with a narrative that makes it easily readable. I didn't always understand the nitty gritty of the science that Iversen was writing about but I could understand the points she was trying to make anyway. I don't have much of a head for science so that is probably mostly my fault anyway.

I liked how she alternated the story between what was happening at Rocky Flats and what was happening in her own personal li...more
Holly
After a day of reflection I changed my 3 stars to 2. I had stopped listening to the book a few times, questioning whether I should continue - I suppose I continued only out of inertia. The entire time I listened I had been put off by Iversen's use of present tense (she used present tense for her family memoir and also in her recounting of the history of Rocky Flats). That and the repetitions gave the book a stilted, limited perspective and a monotony. (People! Present tense isn't always appropri...more
JDK1962
(Disclaimer: 20+ year resident of Boulder, Colorado, just up the road from Rocky Flats.)

I'm conflicted about this book: I enjoyed reading it very much, but the Rocky Flats story, with which I was unfamiliar, was appalling on pretty much every level. While I can certainly understand taking national defense seriously, I cannot understand the idea that national defense, during a time of peace, can be used as an excuse for slipshod production practices and--not to put too fine a point on it--to inad...more
Seth Morris
The sub-title - Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats - does a great job describing the book, but leaves out the scary intersection where commerce, paranoia, and life meet. The rise of communism after WWII "forced" the powers to be to maintain a healthy stock our nuclear arms at our disposal. The kid with the most toys wins. The Rocky Flats becomes a major manufacturer of an integral piece of the U.S.'s nuclear warheads. The author tells her story, growing-up in spitting distance of th...more
Roger Briggs
I finished Full Body Burden and like the memoir style of telling this fascinating story of Rocky Flats. I started working for DOE Hanford in ’92 as a certified industrial hygienist involved in worker safety and health. I retired after 18 years in 2010 and now live in Sequim. I am glad to read now about Rocky Flats which I had heard so much about but knew little of the details of what happened leading up to the raid on the plant by the FBI. There was so much mistrust among workers and management...more
Laura
*ARC Uncorrected Proof Won Through Goodreads*

I really enjoyed this book. While I wasn't fully sure what I was getting when I entered this drawing, I was pleasantly surprised to not only get a book I enjoyed, but also to learn a great deal about a part of this nation's history I previously knew very little about. Kristen Iverson weaves together her personal story with the story of Rocky Flats, a plutonium processing plant near Denver, CO. Iverson spent 12 years researching the plant (as well as l...more
Linda
Ok, so I really can't say that I love this book (5 stars) but I grew up just a few miles south of and a few years after Kristin (still in Arvada) so feel a close affinity to the story. I'm about 1/3 of the way through the book and have spent a lot of time doing silent screams and thinking "Oh My God" in horror. I can't read it late at night or i'll be up half the night thinking about it (and the kid who grew up a block from me who got testicular cancer, and the families i knew, but lost track of...more
Linconter
This is an absolutely chilling read for someone living in Colorado or anywhere near a nuclear production facility. If we cannot trust what the government agencies say about the plutonium and other radioactive matter levels around Rocky Flats (past AND present) - and apparently we definitely canNOT - how does any governmental unit expect us to trust it about the newest biohazard: fracking? And a caution to each and every citizen of Colorado - don't think of going hiking on the "Nature Preserve" t...more
Anne
Love of money is the root of all evil and we see it so clearly in this book - greedy, secretive Dow Chemical polluted these families with plutonium waste and most people didn't even know it was a nuclear processing facility. Once people caught on, thirty years later, Dow Chemical repeatedly denied that there was anything radioactive leaking in to the water and the air and it is very clear that it was.

Spoiler alert (not really all that surprising, sadly) - no one was held accountable for the disa...more
Kevin Martinson
Woooaaaahh! If you ever want to feel underappreciated, used, ignorant, unimportant, angry, powerless, frustrated, or all of the above please pick up this book.

Now, not wanting to scare anyone away by the opening, let me explain. The book follows the life of the author from her childhood up until the middle of her life. The story flip-flops between her memories and other scenes that she has researched for the last 10 years. Altogether a very in-depth and exhaustive project.

The worst part about th...more
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Read It Forward: * FULL BODY BURDEN by Kristen Iversen 1 17 May 17, 2012 07:59am  
Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats (Hardcover)
Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats (Paperback)
Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats (ebook)
Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Shadow of a Secret Nuclear Facility (Paperback)
Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats (Audio)

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Kristen Iversen is the author of Full Body Burden Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats, a finalist for the Barnes & Noble Discover Award and the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence, and Molly Brown Unraveling the Myth, winner of the Colorado Book Award and the Barbara Sudler Award for Nonfiction. Full Body Burden was chosen by Kirkus Reviews and the American Library Association as...more
More about Kristen Iversen...
Molly Brown: Unraveling the Myth Shadow Boxing: Art and Craft in Creative Nonfiction Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats Sites of Insight: A Guide to Colorado Sacred Places

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