The narrative recounts the harrowing experience of Air New England Flight 248's crash on June 17, 1979, through the eyes of survivor Robert Sabbag. It delves into the chaos of the wreckage, the struggle for survival, and the profound physical and emotional trauma endured by the survivors. Sabbag's gripping account offers an intimate exploration of the long-lasting effects of such a tragedy, providing a fast-paced and mesmerizing reflection on coping with memories that are impossible to erase.
Robert Sabbag Book order
Robert Sabbag is an American author and journalist whose work often delves into profound human themes. His style is known for its penetration and ability to capture complex emotions.







- 2010
- 2007
From the writer of the drug-smuggling classic "Snowblind" comes a true story more hair-raising, high-octane, and heart-pounding than any fictional adventure thriller, as he relates the high times and fast living of America's greatest marijuana smuggler. of color photos.
- 2002
Smokescreen
- 341 pages
- 12 hours of reading
'Do you think you have the balls it would take to risk your life for a million dollars?'Allen Long certainly did. They'd have to avoid detection by America's most tooled-up law enforcement agencies and remain wired and vigilant at all times.They'd be pioneering dope smugglers - doing it with aplomb and panache like no one else.
- 1978
Snowblind
- 314 pages
- 11 hours of reading
In 1970s New York, Zachary Swan was a legend. Born at the peak of the Jazz Age with a silver spoon in his mouth, he ended up with that same spoon in his nose when he turned his talents to cocaine smuggling. In Snowblind, a rip-roaring modern classic, Robert Sabbag details Swan's rise, his ingenious and ever more baroque plans to outwit government agents, and the rapid end to his Roman-candle career. A captivating story of a dashing antihero, Snowblind is also a striking portrait of a turbulent age.