The book that was chosen for me was the I Survived: true stories. The reason it was chosen for me and not picked was because at the time all the other I Survived books had already been pulled off the shelf and rented by other children. That’s how popular these books are. The True Stories are a selection of stories taken from real survivors. The first story being the Children’s Blizzard of 1888. In the year 1888 Grover Cleveland was elected president, 38 states now belonged to the USA, the territories were still being explored due to the new railroad and America seemed to be flourishing. When the Blizzard of 1888 happen it truly sent the settlers into a whirlwind. The story written by Lauren Tarshis is a small collections of diary quotes and imagination focusing mostly on the little character of Walter Allen. An undiscovered storm came crashing into the town of Groton Dakota, “It was like day turned to night.” This was the calm before the storm and 400 people died at the hand of this icy tempest.
Then next story of this collection of true stories is the Titanic Disaster. This story is told through the lens of a young seventeen-year-old Jack Thayer who was departing on the Titanic from his trip to Europe with his parents back to America. Theodor Roosevelt was working towards preservation laws in American national parks, women’s suffrage was on the horizon, and travel wasn’t only becoming more relevant and luxurious. The Titanic was the first massive forms of transportation of its kind. Engineered by Thomas Andrews and captained by Edward Smith. This iron giant was said to be unsinkable. But in the horrific stories told of the few survivors we see that that was not the case. Thayer tells of his parents, the comfortable life they shared on the ship and the night that it all came crashing into thee dark Atlantic. 1,500 people never returned home.
The third story of the True Stories is the Great Boston Molasses of 1919 where there was a small poor town that soon become covered in the sticky sugary tar. Molasses was a cheap sweetener and used by most people who were not wealthy enough to simply use white sugar, till sugar prices crashed leaving the town with 2.7 million gallons of molasses. The item was them boiled down into industrial alcohol and used in the first World War as gas for the bombs used against the Germans. On top of that horrible war the flu epidemic spread like wildfire taking with it fifty million people. Death was no stranger to this time period. What was shocking however was when the sound of machine guns rang across the poor side of Boston no one expected it to be the giant molasses vat sending the 2.7 million gallons spewing over the town filling homes, cars and mouths with this goo. Anthony tells this story of how his Italian family was new to this part of the world and America when this tragedy struck and nearly killed him.
Tsunami’s are no stranger to the coasts of Japan and so in 2011 many of the younger generations were well trained in what to do when such a disaster strikes without warning. The Japanese Tsunami, 2011 is told by three young students who lived through the massive earth quake and giant wave. Aki, Kana, and Fumiya explain to us what they saw that day. What is interesting is that for 2011 the most documented event was this tsunami, because the natural desasters didn’t just effect the day and the peoples lives but it shook a nuclear plant causing it to be a constant terror, years after. The young middle schoolers after feeling the huge shaking of the earth, explained as buildings swaying like blades of grass, they knew what was to come. These children began running for their lives picking up they younger students and carrying them, dragging them, pushing them to higher and higher grounds till they were able to turn and see the dark wall climbing to extreme heights (133 ft.) before slamming down on their homes. The death toll was 18,000 and when you see pictures of boats smashed halfway through buildings and “cars teetering on buildings” that number is more understandable. As I said before it didn’t just end there for these people because radioactive particles still fill the air and the ground they live on.
Last but not least is The Henryville Tornado, 2012 told by little Shelby, Diana and Lyric. This was a big year. America had elected her first African American president Barrack Obama, the Iraqi war was said to be coming to an end, it was Dr. Suess’ birthday, and for many, life was on the up and up. But in the small town of Henryville Indiana April 29, 2012 would be marked as the day of true ruin when a tornado ripped through the town downing homes, schools and barns. After the tornado had passes the hail storm came crushing what was left with its baseball sized ice. The tornado destroyed 215 miles of land, moving at high speeds of 60 miles per hour, killing 695 people.
These stories are not fiction they are real stories told through the eyes of real people reminding us that tragedy doesn’t discriminate, every day is a gift, and to cherish the people who are in our lives and to always be prepared.