Los Angeles Times

MORE TO THE STORY

Numerous books and films over the last 30 years have covered the Chernobyl disaster and its aftermath. Here are a few worth checking out:

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On the page

“Midnight in Chernobyl: The Untold Story of the World’s Greatest Nuclear Disaster” by Adam Higginboth­am: Exhaustive­ly researched and critically acclaimed history of the event. The Times called it “a riveting, deeply reported reconstruc­tion.”

“Voices From Chernobyl” by Svetlana

Alexievich: The Nobel Prize winner in literature puts together an oral history, told by the people who were there.

“Chernobyl: The History of a Nuclear

Catastroph­e” by Serhii Plokhy: A Ukrainian historian weighs in on the disaster. Called “gripping” by the Wall Street Journal.

“Chernobyl: 01:23:40” by Andrew

Leatherbar­row:Another in-depth look at the event, which “Chernobyl” series writer Craig Mazin found “incredibly helpful.”

“The Truth About Chernobyl” by

Grigori Medvedev: The chief engineer at the constructi­on of the Chernobyl plant, who was an investigat­or after the accident, gives an account of the accident and its aftermath. An “invaluable” work, said Publishers Weekly.

On the screen

“Chernobyl Heart”: The short subject Oscar winner in 2004 looks at children born after the event who have deteriorat­ing heart conditions.

“The Battle of Chernobyl”:

This 2006 documentar­y details how the disaster happened and the Soviet attempts to cover up and downplay it.

“Chernobyl 3828”: It’s a short Ukrainian documentar­y about the containmen­t efforts.

“Pripyat”: This 1999 documentar­y is about the people who elected to stay in the title city even after it was rendered a virtual ghost town by the nuclear disaster.

On the same wavelength

“Stalker”: This 1979 film from Russian writer-director Andrei Tarkovsky (“Ivan’s Childhood”) predated the disaster by seven years, but its tale of the title character, a guide who leads people into the Zone, an enigmatic post-apocalypti­c landscape, seems eerily prescient. If nothing else, the film’s visuals of the Zone look like they were shot in post-meltdown Chernobyl.

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