Isaac's Storm: A Man, a Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History
by Erik Larson, Edward Herrmann (Narrator)Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1634)
bookshelves:
history,
science
Read in April, 2002
recommends it for:
People who live inland.
Ever want to read a nonfiction tragedy about a presumptive meteorologist? Exactly. Still, Isaac's Storm is an engaging cautionary tale, and one with a bit of relevance for America today. In fact the book is almost foreshadowing in that it was published just a couple of years before Hurricane Katrina. The writing in this book is not nearly as tuned as it is in The Devil in the White City, but Larson is still better at this than nine of ten nonfiction writers. Side note: when Katrina hit, several ...more
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Read in August, 2007
Such a great historical account of the Galveston, Tx Hurricane of early 1900s. It was great.
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Read in September, 2008
recommended to Carolyn by:
Josh Marshall (Talking Points Memo)
I really like the way this book captures the dynamic we now experience when waiting for a hurricane: gradually watching its progress and dreading its outcome. The book was gripping and harrowing and I had trouble going to bed after I finished it (devouring it in one day). I had a few quibbles with how Larson tells history. (There's one assumption he makes--and acknowledges he makes in his notes--that felt like crossing the line to me, but I do appreciate that he has the notes so sticklers lik...more
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Read in November, 2007
I now judge all books written about a specific event involving destruction and danger by the standard of Norman Maclean's Young Men and Fire (see my review of that book). By its lights, Isaac's Storm only realizes part of the promise or drama that would appear to be inherent in the subject.
The book tells the story of the massive hurricane that hit Galveston, Texas on September 8, 1900. Tides rose several feet in a very short time, and in the flat landscape of the city, the results were diast...more
The book tells the story of the massive hurricane that hit Galveston, Texas on September 8, 1900. Tides rose several feet in a very short time, and in the flat landscape of the city, the results were diast...more
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Read in October, 2007
Even though I very much enjoyed Devil in the White City, I was worried that I was going to be disappointed by Isaac's Storm. Maybe I was worried that a book about the weather (even tremendously destructive weather) would be boring; maybe I was worried that Larson's penchant for melodrama would overload; or maybe I worried that having grown up near Galveston, the books description of it at the turn of the century wouldn't match my imagination. Thankfully, none of these were the case...more
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bookshelves:
history,
natural-disaster,
non-fiction
Read in May, 2003
Well-written history is sheer pleasure to read. Isaac's Storm is well-written, compelling, exciting, and more than mere pleasure. It's a delightful book.
Larson tells the story of the September, 1900 hurricane that demolished much of Galveston, Texas. This storm killed about 6,000 people. No one in Galveston, including Weather Bureau official Isaac Cline, saw it coming. The national weather service, then in its infancy and fighting for funding and credibility, thought the storm would miss the...more
Larson tells the story of the September, 1900 hurricane that demolished much of Galveston, Texas. This storm killed about 6,000 people. No one in Galveston, including Weather Bureau official Isaac Cline, saw it coming. The national weather service, then in its infancy and fighting for funding and credibility, thought the storm would miss the...more
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A good read about the 1900 storm that hit Galveston. Surprised me to find out that it is to date the deadliest natural disaster in American history. Galveston was the Manhattan (I couldn't believe it either!) of the South and poised to become one of the most important cities in the U.S. both commercially and culturally but mother nature had other plans (Houston, at the time, was considered just a mud hole up the road.) The city was devastated (the entire island was at one point completely unde...more
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history,
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Read in January, 2000
Update - September 13, 2008. Hurricane Ike barrels into Galveston and I keep thinking about this great book and remembering the photographs of long ago destruction.
Isaac's Storm so fully swept me away into another place, another time that I didn't want it to end. I braced myself from the monstrous winds, recoiled in shock at the sight of flailing children floating by, and shook my head at the hubris of our scientists who were so convinced that they had the weather all figur...more
Isaac's Storm so fully swept me away into another place, another time that I didn't want it to end. I braced myself from the monstrous winds, recoiled in shock at the sight of flailing children floating by, and shook my head at the hubris of our scientists who were so convinced that they had the weather all figur...more
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
historical narrative junkies
Fairly incredible story, and I say story because Erik Larson HAS to be taking some liberties with this recreation of events in Galveston when a giant hurricane (Level 5? Not sure) rose the sea level something like 8-14 feet over a shore town that sat practically dead level with the Gulf of Mexico under good circumstances. The main story , though, is improved by some kick-ass research into the always fascinating late 19th century - early 20th century hubris associated with the Industrial Rev...more
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Read in September, 2007
Erik Larson, the acclaimed author of The Devil in the White City, wrote this intriguing account of the hurricane that devastated Galveston, Texas, in September 1900. The focus is on Isaac Cline, the head of the local branch of the government Weather Bureau, which was trying to establish itself as the most reliable source of weather forecasts. Cline and his superior...more
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Read in June, 2006
recommends it for:
Anyone
This is one of my favorite books, not just of nonfiction. I think it's better than Larson's other major book, The Devil in the White City. The first chapter alone is brilliant in setting up what's to follow: the devastating Galveston Hurricane in 1900 and its destruction of the city, Isaac Cline, and American hubris.
The sections on meteorological history are slow but necessary; after all, can you picture a time before weather on the evening news, let alone Weather Channel? Isaac Cline's pers...more
The sections on meteorological history are slow but necessary; after all, can you picture a time before weather on the evening news, let alone Weather Channel? Isaac Cline's pers...more
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Read in April, 2008
Long before the present era of politicized government in which the foxes are guarding the hen house, this book provides an illuminating look at the arrogance, insider politics and bureaucratic bungling that corrupted the efficiency of the US weather bureau at the turn of the 20th century. As for the main story threads, though, I felt that Isaac remains a bit of an enigma and that Larson's usual narrative strategy of interrupting story threads to build some sort of suspense and create irony doesn...more
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Read in February, 2006
I'm starting to think Erik Larson is a genius. I devoured The Devil In The White City and was eager to read <Isaac's Storm</i>, even if it was only about a boring old hurricane and not a serial killer and a world's fair.
Thanks to Larson's writing, Isaac's Storm is every bit as engrossing as The Devil In The White City. Reading this book will transport you to Galveston, Texas in the year 1900 as a monster hurricane barrels toward you. You'll be shocked and app...more
Thanks to Larson's writing, Isaac's Storm is every bit as engrossing as The Devil In The White City. Reading this book will transport you to Galveston, Texas in the year 1900 as a monster hurricane barrels toward you. You'll be shocked and app...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Anyone who has lived through a hurricane.
I was alerted to Eric Larson's writing after he published "The Devil in the White City." Somehow it seems that his non-fiction subjects seem to mesh with my own interests. Isaac's storm is about the hurricane that decimated Galveston in 1900. I fortunately did not find as many parallels to Hurricane Katrina as I thought I might. (Pyres of burning bodies would be really hard to handle.)
The only thing I wish he had touched on was an actual death toll from the storm. Also he menti...more
The only thing I wish he had touched on was an actual death toll from the storm. Also he menti...more
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This is a really fascinating tale and one that I was unfamiliar with before hearing of this book. Especially after Katrina, it's interesting to see how far weather prediction has come, and it puts weather-related destruction into perspective.
As a side note, I'd love for someone to write a book of fiction based on the people who were given as much whiskey as they could drink to clean up the thousands of corpses left in the hurricane's wake...
As a side note, I'd love for someone to write a book of fiction based on the people who were given as much whiskey as they could drink to clean up the thousands of corpses left in the hurricane's wake...
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biography,
history,
science
An account of the 1900 hurricane that destroyed Galveston TX, and a biography of the weatherman who watched the storm come in. Full of human drama and the hubris of the day, it was an interesting book that I have only minor quibbles with. The interstitial chapters were set to look like giant pull quotes, all in bold with lines running parallel up the text block. It was ugly and really not necessary. The chapter titles, and the tone of the chapters themselves, were enough to set those sections ap...more
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bookshelves:
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Read in January, 2001
recommends it for:
everyone
One cannot help but compare the hurricane that struck Galveston in 1800 and Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005. The most glaring similarity is that in both instances, people thought that they had the resources to withstand the fury of a hurricane.
Eric Larsen knows how to bring a piece of history alive, which he certainly does well in this book. Isaac Cline, the man from the Weather Bureau, is one of the main characters of the book. Larsen also follows a number of other people from ...more
Eric Larsen knows how to bring a piece of history alive, which he certainly does well in this book. Isaac Cline, the man from the Weather Bureau, is one of the main characters of the book. Larsen also follows a number of other people from ...more
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Read in June, 2008
Isaac’s Storm has some great descriptions of what it feels like to be caught in a hurricane. The story pulls you in and keeps you turning those pages. Erik Larson included excellent maps that help you easily plot the course of the hurricane but no pictures. He describes a number of photos but must have either thought them unimportant or been unable to get the rights to them. If this book is ever reprinted, including photos would be a plus.
For a book with so much real death, the author jar...more
For a book with so much real death, the author jar...more
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Read in December, 2007
This book is the story of the massive hurricane that destroyed much of Galveston, Texas in the fall of 1900. The book follows multiple residents of Galveston but primarily focuses on the life of Isaac Cline, the chief meteorologist at the Galveston Weather Bureau. For me, the lesson of this story is one that we humans seem to forget again and again, despite or maybe even in spite of our technological advances we do not have mastery of the world around us. The author Erik Larson is able to ba...more
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This book was very interesting after everything that happened in New Orleans with Katrina. It showed that natural disasters like this have happened before and somehow there is a confluence of geographic factors and human elements that come together to make the tragedy worse. I didn't realize that Erik Larson also wrote the book I am reading now, The Devil in the White City. He has a way of making non fiction very interesting and compelling to read.
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