Deep Down Dark is the novel that inspired the film The 33 starring Lou Diamond Phillips, Cote de Pablo and Antonio Banderas.
When the San José mine collapsed outside of Copiapó, Chile, in August 2010, it trapped thirty-three miners beneath thousands of feet of rock for a record-breaking sixty-nine days. After the disaster, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Héctor Tobar received exclusive access to the miners and their tales, and in Deep Down Dark, he brings them to haunting, visceral life. We learn what it was like to be imprisoned inside a mountain, understand the horror of being slowly consumed by hunger, and experience the awe of working in such a place-underground passages filled with danger and that often felt alive. A masterwork of narrative journalism and a stirring testament to the power of the human spirit, The 33: Deep Down Dark captures the profound ways in which the lives of everyone involved in the catastrophe were forever changed.
A Finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award
A Finalist for a Los Angeles Times Book Prize
A New York Times Book Review Notable Book
Selected for NPR's Morning Edition Book Club
- Try Poetry
- Our Books are Blooming
- Life-Changing Women
- Scream Queens
- Celebrating Black Lit
- Debut Authors of 2023
- You Turn My Pages
- Love Between the Covers
- It's a First!
- Celebrate Black History
- Shelf Care
- Essays to Expand Your Mind
- New Year, New You!
- See all
- Poetry Out Loud
- Audiobooks for your Commute
- Try Poetry
- She Persisted: Women's history
- Black Voices and Black History
- It's a First!
- Love Between the Covers
- Be an Antiracist
- You Turn My Pages
- Celebrate Black History
- Shelf Care
- New Year, New You (Audiobook)
- Vacation Interrupted
- See all