kvmless.blogg.se

Jesmyn ward salvage the bones review
Jesmyn ward salvage the bones review













A good deal of children’s literature about Hurricane Katrina has emerged as well-perhaps because the storm’s powerful, devastating impact created in children questions so large and profound that stories were needed to explain the catastrophe. Much of the literature that has emerged in the wake of the storm, however, has been nonfiction, such as Dave Eggers’s Zeitoun, which focuses on Syrian-American business owner Abdulrahman Zeitoun, who chose to stay and ride out the storm in New Orleans to help his friends and neighbors, only to be arrested and accused of “terrorist activities” by the US National Guard.

jesmyn ward salvage the bones review jesmyn ward salvage the bones review

Tom Piazza’s City of Refuge is another notable Katrina novel, and follows two families-one white and one black-as they confront the storm. Jesmyn Ward’s Salvage the Bones is one of the standout literary novels of Hurricane Katrina. Relief organizations such as FEMA and the Red Cross were unprepared for the intensity of the storm, and these organizations found themselves overburdened and incapable of providing aid, relief, or rescue on the scale the storm demanded, certainly adding to the number of lives ultimately lost in the storm and the floods that followed: an estimated 1,836 lives were lost, making Katrina the deadliest storm in America since 1928. The insufficient emergency response from the government at the federal, state, and local level highlighted the ways in which race, class, and employment status affected both preparation for and relief after the storm an evacuation order was not issued until just hours before the storm made landfall, and many impoverished or otherwise struggling families had no choice but to stay and ride out the storm, leading to mass casualties not just in New Orleans but all along the coast of Louisiana and Mississippi. Though catastrophic damage was seen from Florida to Texas, the city that saw the most devastating consequences and the most concentrated loss of life was New Orleans, Louisiana, where breaches in surge protection levees led to massive flooding that covered 80 percent of the city for weeks on end. Salvage the Bones is situated in the days leading up to-and the aftermath of-Hurricane Katrina, a destructive Category 5 hurricane that hit the Gulf Coast of the United States in August of 2005.















Jesmyn ward salvage the bones review