With the pacing and emotional ups and downs of a good romance novel, Janice A. Thompson weaves her fictional characters through the streets of a very real Galveston, Texas in the throes of the worst storm in history.
In the unsuspecting days leading up to “The Great Storm”—the Hurricane of 1900—we meet a number of archetypical folks whose lives are all brought together as the pages turn. Thompson even manages to include a few historical figures, adding to the realism and emotional involvement I felt as I read. People such as Isaac Cline and Clara Barton meet and interact with her created cast of characters.
The story of this storm is a harsh one. Six thousand Galvestonians lost their lives on September 8, 1900. That many more lost their homes and all of the 30,000 residents remaining had lost a loved one in the ordeal.
As we read Thompson’s version of the sad tale, we meet the “prodigal” son, ironically come home to the island just hours before disaster strikes. We meet the uppity woman he calls mother and the detached father who is helplessly absent from the island when the storm hits. We watch as all their lives are changed—forever transformed by the realization that they are the fortunate ones, and how grateful they are for what God has given them.
We suffer with the real-life nuns of St. Mary’s Orphanage—given fictional names here, and imbued with personalities we can identify with and appreciate. We read of the true story of the nuns tying ropes around their waists and from child to child in an attempt to keep everyone safe, and although we know those attempts were all in vain, through the magic of literary imagination, one of Thompson’s nuns survives to carry hope and help rebuild her home and her city.
I was specifically touched by the story of the young woman who struggles with her decision to become a nurse, becoming disillusioned and almost giving up, just in time to be faced with the onslaught of the storm and the hundreds of patients who need her, including her own younger sister. And, who in the process, loses her parents to the storm, and meets her sister’s rescuer—our prodigal son—falling in love and becoming a part of Galveston’s recovery and rebirth.
As a devotee of Galveston history, and the 1900 storm in particular, I will read anything I can get my hands on dealing with this subject. I did not know when I began this read, that I was reading an inspirational story, and although there is no doubt that the author means to represent her belief that faith in God and in his plan was paramount to her characters’ decisions, I did not feel overwhelmed by it. It was instead, a lovely, uplifting, historically-inspired story of the human spirit and the will to survive and overcome.
*****
Opening sentence: I am going home.
For those who know me, it will come as no surprise that I pounced on a book on this subject. I am predictable on that count. And, in that vein: I love the opening sentence.