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THE RAINBOW'S SHADOW by D. Lance Lunsford The true stories of the Baby Jessica Rescue and the Tragedies that followed True Story/Investigative Reporting Tragedies of "Baby Jessica's Rescue" 5.25 inches x 8.25 inches 220 pages; Paperback 30 Illustrations (black & white) ISBN 0975566784 Regular Price $14.95 |
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time “Everybody’s Baby.” Her rescue was broadcast live and in prime time. Clean-cut firemen and no-name, shaggy oil field roughnecks, who dropped what they were doing to lend a hand to save a life, carried out the “made for television” moment. It was also an event that, sadly, led to the eventual destruction of lives and careers. And it tore at least one segment of Midland—the “Tall City”—into fragments. Jessica dropped into an uncovered well shaft in October 1987. For 58 hours, firemen, police and drilling crews labored through nearly 35 feet of solid rock to bring her to safety. Cheers erupted around the world as the bandage-swathed toddler popped to the surface. But, over time, the cheering stopped and the rescuer’s grip on the spotlight slowly slipped away. For some, despair and tragedy followed. A new book, The Rainbow’s Shadow, examines the life-changing experience the rescuers suffered through. He follows up on all the major players: From the all-American fireman hero, Robert O’Donnell, who lathered Jessica in surgical jelly and plucked her from her entombment “like a squashed plum” to Andy Glasscock, the career-track police detective sergeant, who sang children’s songs to Jessica from the rim of the well. O’Donnell fell into depression and prescription medication-induced madness, later taking his own life. Glasscock was a good cop, gone bad, who is serving long stretches in prison for rape, child pornography and holding a garage full of bombs and hand grenades. The story is “one for the ages,” says Clayton Williams, a Texas oilman who authored the foreword to the book. D. Lance Lunsford, a Midland native and former Midland newspaper reporter, spent two years gathering facts, interviews and researching the story. Lance Lunsford knows more than just a little about The Tall City he writes about. He rode a training-wheeled bike a stones’ throw from Jessica’s well and later toiled in the Reporter-Telegram newsroom of Crimmins, Ramona Nye and Rick Brown—the same newsroom that so closely followed the Jessica McClure story. Lunsford is a lot of things American—husband, father, Texas Aggie and Eagle Scout. He spent years ferreting out information on the cast of characters that made up The Rainbow’s Shadow. He currently covers regional news stories for the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Pew Research, a media research organization, would agree. The “Baby Jessica” story still ranks among the most followed stories in Pew Research polling. More people, in fact, closely followed Jessica’s rescue than did the death of Princess Diana, several years later, Pew says. |
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