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The Trinity Test Anniversary

Seventy-five years ago, on July 16, 1945, the world witnessed the first atomic bomb test.

The bomb lit up the sky and scorched the earth of the Jornada del Muerto desert in New Mexico.


The lead physicist and architect of the Manhattan Project, J. Robert Oppenheimer, named the atomic test “Trinity” in a conflicted homage to John Donne’s sonnet, “Batter My Heart, Three-Personed God.” As a remembrance of that day, and this 75thanniversary, we’re introducing a new section of the HANNAH’S WAR website created entirely for Book Clubs.  

HANNAH’S WAR explores the host of complex, conflicted characters and the ambiguous moral history leading up the test. The new Book Club section is designed to bring readers into dynamic engagement with the author, these characters, their stories, and the book’s themes.  

In this new Book Clubs section you can: arrange for the author’s virtual appearance at your Book Club; download Reader’s Guides with thought-provoking questions for an insightful and lively discussion; access a menu with recipes for Hannah’s War-themed food and drinks, and much, much more. 

On the anniversary of the Trinity Test, let HANNAH’S WAR guide us as we grapple with the complex and fascinating history that ushered the world into the nuclear age.

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Do you want your copy of Hannah’s War autographed? Please fill out the form linked above and I will send you a hand-written personalized bookplate, for yourself or for someone you love.

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Schedule a live online Book Club

Please put the name of your book club, the name and contact information of the host, and the day or days your book club meets. Jan or her assistant will be in touch with you to schedule an appearance.

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I have done many Virtual Q and A’s with Book Clubs on Zoom and Skype; the conversations are inspiring and enthralling for both writers and readers. Please fill out this form to schedule a talk with your group.

Reader’s Guide Download

Click to download

Q & A

Questions for your bookclub from Jan on the research for Hannah’s War

Q and A

Book Club Posts

Op. Ed: Trinity Test Anniversary

July 16th Trinity Test Birthday: New Content for Book Clubs

New for Book Clubs: Virtual appearances and downloads

Connecting Book Clubs

Meet The Author: Jan Eliasberg

Q&A With Jan Eliasberg on her Research for Hannah’s War

Excerpt from Hannah’s War

Connecting Book Clubs

Jan Eliasberg introduces free downloads and tools for book clubs to connect with her and her book, Hannah’s War.

There is nothing I love more than talking with Book Clubs about Hannah’s War; the dynamic engagement with readers bring the characters, the story, and the themes of Hannah’s War to life.


For discussion questions, please download the Readers Group Guide.

Readers’ Group Guide (PDF, print friendly)Download


For a list of Hannah’s War-themed food and drink, please see my food and drink posts.


I look forward to answering questions, sharing my research, and my passion about Hannah’s War with your Book Club soon.


Photo information and credit: Shift change at the Y-12 uranium enrichment facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, during the Manhattan Project. Notice the billboard: “Make CEW count — Continue to protect project information.” circa 1945 © Ed Westcott / US Army / Manhattan Engineer District

Food & Drink

HANNAH’S WAR THEMED FOOD AND COCKTAILS FOR BOOK CLUBS

Dr. Hannah Weiss is poised between worlds, the genteel European world of her memories – of science, art, music, and romance — and the parched, jagged, barbed-wire of Los Alamos, a rugged encampment perched on the edge of a harsh mesa. I’ve put together a HANNAH’S WAR menu with food and drink representing both the old world and the new.

In the utterly improbable, pressure-cooker world of Los Alamos, New Mexico, scientists were racing against time to crack the heart of the atom before the Nazis. By day, the high stress of intense work, the moral ambiguities of their goal, and the uncertainty of life in a time of war; by night, they were indulging in the debauched revelry of escape.

What better way to escape than with alcohol and dessert?

Hannah’s War menu for Book Clubs

EDITH WARNER’S CHOCOLATE CAKE

If Martinis aren’t the drink for you, try “The Manhattan Project.”

Oppenheimer’s Legendary Martini or “The Manhattan Project”

Interviews, Features and Music

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The Matilda Effect

Interview

With Tony Shalhoub at Live Talks Los Angeles

Interview

What’s the Story About?

Interview

Author Stories Podcast

Interview

Read of The Day Book Club

Interview, Book Club

Jan Eliasberg ’74 – THIS IS WHY

Interview, Book Club

Slim Gaillard – Atomic Cocktail

Music, Book Club

Fallout song Atomic Cocktail – The Slim Gaillard Quartette

Music, Book Club

Bruckner, Symphony Nr 4

Music, Book Club

Follow Jan’s Media Channel

See all Jan’s playlists, more music for your book clubs, and new interviews.

Video About Hannah’s War

Award-winning filmmaker Jan Eliasberg’s HANNAH’S WAR, for readers of The Nightingale and The Alice Network, a thrilling historical debut about a female scientist working to develop the first atomic bomb during World War II, and the young military investigator determined to uncover her secret past.

Publication: March 3, 2020


“A GRIPPING TRUE STORY LONG OVERDUE TO BE TOLD”

“I flew through Hannah’s War, a gripping true story long overdue to be told, of a brilliant woman physicist working to develop the first atomic bomb and the secret she fights to protect.”
Martha Hall Kelly (THE LILAC GIRLS; LOST ROSES)


About the Book

Hannah’s War Excerpt

Excerpt from Hannah’s War

Thanks to Little, Brown for making this excerpt from Hannah’s War available to my readers.


CHAPTER ONE

They come for me at dawn, as I knew they would. I’ve slept in my clothes, and I ask if I may I step into my shoes. They allow that, but nothing else. He tells me to go outside, and I do. Parked on the dirt road between my barracks and the laboratory is a vehicle the Americans quaintly call a “paddy wagon,” an absurdly chipper term for the dank iron trolley that will transport me from Los Alamos to the prison at Fort Leavenworth, where I will wait again (not for long, I fear) for my perfunctory trial and inevitable execution.

The chain reaction leading to my death has been accelerated by my own divided heart. I see that now in a way I never could when all was theory, white chalk on blackboard, equations like pale bones scattered across scorched earth. The man I shouldn’t have trusted latches the manacle around my wrist and fixes it to a hasp welded hard to the bench.

“I’ll protect you,” he says, with such earnestness it makes me smile.

“You’re lying again.”

He glances over his shoulder. Sufficiently assured that no one can see us, he takes my face between his hands. “I will protect you, Hannah. If I can.”

I think he might kiss me, but that would be a danger to both of us. He is a meticulous and cautious man by nature, skilled at the art of keeping secrets. Most lovers are. I have limited empirical evidence to support this hypothesis, having loved only two men, but both of them held truth at a safe distance. Safe for them, not for me. His promise of protection—however well intended—doesn’t comfort me. So I comfort myself with equations.

The distance from the laboratories in Los Alamos, New Mexico, to the prison compound in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, is 874 miles. We left when dawn was still a wishful glow behind

dark mountains. We are traveling, I estimate, at an average speed of forty-two miles per hour, allowing for stops—

Oh God. Will they stop? Will they allow me that simple comfort?

No. I won’t think about that. The equations. Stay with them. I drum the fingers of my free hand, playing an invisible keyboard, on the metal beside my legs. This is my habit when I run numbers, drumming my fingers on hard surfaces, desks, and tables. A distance of 874 miles at an average speed of 42 miles per hour creates a probability of 20.8095 hours of actual travel time, plus the approximately 27 minutes it would take for the MPs to force the paddy wagon to the side of the road, slide a bag over my head, and—

Stay with the equations.

“I will protect you, Hannah,” he said. “If I can.”

A distance of 874 miles, leaving at dawn, allowing for the variable If I can.

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