Tom Condon
On the sunny, pleasant morning of July 29, 2005, Mark Robinson was stopped at a light in Avon on his way to work. He was making a mental list of what he had to do that day. And then — obliteration. He regained consciousness at Hartford Hospital, with just a vague, hazy sense that something really bad had happened to him. And indeed it had. Robinson was one of the survivors of the horrific Avon Mountain crash, where a fully loaded, poorly maintained, out-of-control dump truck weighing 70,000 pounds came barreling down the steep grade on Route 44 on the west side of the mountain at 80 mph and plowed into the traffic waiting for the green light in the eastbound lanes. Five people were killed and many were injured. Robinson suffered nine broken bones and a punctured lung. Yet, by unfathomable fate, he lived. And like Melville's Ishmael, he had to tell the tale. Robinson, director of internal communications for ING in Windsor, has written a book titled "Smoke, Fire and Angels — Tragedy on Avon Mountain and the Life-Changing Aftermath." He is a clear and competent writer with a good eye for detail. He's written a good book (and is donating all the proceeds to the families most in need after the crash)..........Technorati Tags:smoke fire and angels, avon mountain crash, mark robinson, barbara bongiovanni, maureen edlund, chip stotler, frank juan, abdulrafeem naafi
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