T r u e   B o o k   C o r n e r . c o m

Book Locator
Home
Talk To Us
Search
Links

Crime

Serial Killers
Shocking Crimes
Mafia
Criminology
Gangs
True Crime
Murder & Mayhem
Terrorism
Conspiracy Theories
Espionage

Celebs

Hollywood Stars
TV Celebs

Biographies

Criminals
Celebs
Rich & Famous
Military
Political
Royalty
Adventurers

Disasters

Natural Disasters
Ships & Shipwrecks
Earthquakes & Volcanoes
Tornadoes
Hurricanes

Wars

World War II
Vietnam War
Korean War
Military Intelligence

History

United States
Europe
World

I
t
e
m

D
e
t
a
i
l

Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America - Paperback

Buy Used/3rdParty

More product information

Find other editions
(Softback, Hardback, Audio, E-Book)

Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America

List Price: $16.00    Our Price: $10.56

You Save: 34%

Paperback - 02 April, 1998
Simon & Schuster

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Author: John M. Barry
ISBN: 0684840022

Number of Media: 1

More books by John M. Barry

Related Areas: 20th century, Flood control, Floods, General, History, History - General History, History - U.S., History: American, Mississippi River, Mississippi River Valley, Natural Disasters, United States - 20th Century/20s, United States - State & Local - South, Modern fiction, Social Science / African-American Studies, USA


Some Similar Products:

                      


Paperback Description

When Mother Nature rages, the physical results are never subtle. Because we cannot contain the weather, we can only react by tabulating the damage in dollar amounts, estimating the number of people left homeless, and laying the plans for rebuilding. But as John M. Barry expertly details in


A Few Customer Reviews

The Great Flood

I had never heard of the Mississippi flood before picking up this book and I am surprised that I had never hard of it after reading about it. This is arguably the greatest natural disaster to hit the United States until Hurricane Katrina. To see the response of the government then and now there are shocking similarities The army corp of engineers makes a similar performance and it is through private enterprise and local political networks that areas are saved. One of the sadder points in the book is the treatment of African Americans and southern racism in this time period is clearly displayed in most areas. The flood which wiped out parts of Mississippi and spread down to New Orleans was catastrophic. Seeing the idea of detonating levees and sacrificing areas of save others were tough choices that have implications in the post Katrina world. This is a highly recommend book that will make one think about natural disaster response from a truly catastrophic event.


They're Gonna Wash Us Away - The Rest of the Story

Randy Newman told the story of the great Louisiana flood of 1927 in a few memorable but not very historically accurate verses. Barry tells it with painstaking research and narrative of 75 years surrounding and including 1927. He opens with the civil engineering debate that raged for years about how to "control" the Mississippi River--levees or controlled drainage. Once the flood happens he focuses on how people dealt with it as it was happening (race relations in the early 20th century were sorely tested) and afterwards (St. Bernard and Plaquemines Parishes, having been sacrifice to "save" New Orleans, were left almost low and dry when it came time to distribute money for recovery---sound familiar?)One memorable theme is that nature is unsympathetic to political compromise. Barry rivals David McCullough in the genre of popular history writers.


Outstanding Piece of Work in History, Politics and Humanity

Mr. Barry has done an exceptional job of weaving the elements of modern life together, natural disaster, power, money, politics, race together to tell an ingrossing and disturbing story, one that is a relevant today as it was when it happened in the late twenties. America is still affected by what happened then and faces many of the same challenges today--Katrina and whenever or whereever there is great human suffering brought on by natural disaster. (Just wait until the New Madrid earthquake occurs again. That may be the only natural disaster that could rival this flood and its effect on our nation, society and culture.)

 

Amazon.Com prices and availability subject to change.