"No living thing exists all by itself. Each is linked to other living things and to its surroundings."
—Volcano: The Eruption and Healing of Mount St. Helens, P. 34
I'd give two and a half stars to this book.
Volcano actually spends less time going into depth about the eruption itself and the jaw-dropping facts about the devastation that was caused by it, and more on discussing how it was that prominent Mount St. Helens, which had in mere moments morphed into a sterile wasteland of death and decay, slowly became a haven for new life once again. And we're talking about an eruption so violent that in one single day, St. Helens lost twelve hundred feet from its stature, so there would have been no shortage of material for the book even had it concentrated solely on that side of the action. Even as it is, a great deal of the book's power comes from the photographs that author Patricia Lauber chose to represent the scenes before and after the disaster. These photos were selected with impeccable insight, and did a beautiful yet sobering job of showing the whole picture.
However, I really think that readers of any age will be interested by the book's main focus on the many types of simple life that were able to survive the violent upheaval of the May 1980 St. Helens volcanic eruption. Volcano notes that St. Helens has erupted countless times throughout history, and that scientists knew life would eventually return to the barren mountain, but even the experts were surprised by how quickly life in all its forms began to return. Despite more than fifty human casualties from the blow-up, and the loss of thousands upon thousands of square miles of beautiful forrest and the wildlife that had called it home, the most important lesson that the eruption seemed to offer was that life is amazingly resilient; in fact, it is always more flexible and able to adapt than than we expect. No matter what unforeseen tragedy unveils itself and no matter how much damage it inflicts, the spark of will behind all life will eventually stand up again and face the risks of living. The concluding message of the book is rooted in this vein of hope, which I found to be a completely appropriate take on it all.