Showing posts with label disaster preparedness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disaster preparedness. Show all posts

Storm Warning: The Story of a Killer Tornado Review

Storm Warning: The Story of a Killer Tornado
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Storm Warning: The Story of a Killer Tornado ReviewOklahoma City is one of those places that was ripe for disaster. Sitting smack dab in the middle of Tornado Alley, it was only waiting for the big one to hit and cause a lot of trouble. On May 3, 1999, that disaster happened. A tornado that traveled from Southwestern Oklahoma ended up crossing a major section of the OK City suburbs, leaving more than 40 dead and many more injured. Nancy Mathis reviews this American tragedy and helps to see how technology has made survival of even a major storm like this easier. This is a great account of how tornadoes in today's world are watched, tracked, and how the warnings are sent out. This book is a great read to all who have an interest in weather, science, and human interaction. I read it all in one sitting.Storm Warning: The Story of a Killer Tornado Overview

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Trapped Review

Trapped
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Trapped ReviewScotty just wants to go home the Tuesday morning school is canceled due to the snow piling up outside. But his friends Jason and Pete convince him to stay a little longer to work in the shop, just until four o'clock when Jason's dad will pick them up. But the school slowly empties and the storm gets worse, and as the hours stretch into the evening, it becomes clear that no one is coming.

Sevens teens are stuck in the high school in the worst blizzard in a century, and no one knows that they're there. At first, it's not too bad--they have access to plenty of food and they can wait it out. But then the power and the heat go out, and the snow continues to pile higher and higher, compromising the building . The snow has them trapped inside, but even the building isn't safe anymore--will it be too late for Scotty and his friends?

Trapped is one of those gripping and chilling reads that will make you question just how likely you would be able to survive if thrust into the same situation. It's quite a spectacular story of survival, but it's very well-described, showing that Northrop really thought this situation through inside and out. His writing also shows that he really understands teens; the attitudes, the feelings, and the interactions are all done very well, and the emotions and tensions that everyone feels due to their entrapment and despair are all very realistic. Northrop also makes really good use of foreshadowing as Scotty alludes to some fatal consequences of the storm at the beginning of the story, making the book seem a bit foreboding before the snow even really begins to fall. The ending was powerful and abrupt, but it does leave you wondering about the fate of so many people, most of which aren't revealed, or are left up to the reader's imagination. This is a quick, unsettling read that will be easy to get into, but not so easy to leave once you've finished.Trapped Overview

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A World Turned Over : A Killer Tornado and the Lives It Changed Forever Review

A World Turned Over : A Killer Tornado and the Lives It Changed Forever
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A World Turned Over : A Killer Tornado and the Lives It Changed Forever ReviewI would like to make two comments about this book. Most important, it is powerful, beautiful, and interesting, and is a great example of literary reporting, as well as memoir.
My second comment is to express my anger at the amazingly ill-informed and inaccurate comments made by "a reader from Arlington, Virginia," who saw fit to give the lowest rating possible to a book that, by all appearances, he or she has not even read. The comment that it is "poorly researched" could not be further from the truth, and his condescending suggestion that the author should have made use of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History makes him look like a fool, since that institution was cited as a source of information, as was the Eudora Welty Library. The reviewer is right that the town of "Byram" is not spelled correctly, though his argument is rather deflated in light of the fact that he cannot correctly spell the word "rectified" himself. There are many Jackson natives that would take issue with his assertion that there is not a single live oak tree in Jackson. One of the most amazingly ignorant "criticisms" is that "there were very few eyewitness interviews in the book"-----There were more than twenty. Even more outrageous is the claim that there is "very little on the impact the event had upon the community of South Jackson." (sic)
In reality, this impact is the subject of the ENTIRE BOOK.
It's unfortunate that this person's careless reading was translated into a review. Listen instead to The New York Times, which praised A World Turned Over and called it "lush" and "evocative."A World Turned Over : A Killer Tornado and the Lives It Changed Forever Overview

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And Hell Followed With It: Life and Death in a Kansas Tornado Review

And Hell Followed With It: Life and Death in a Kansas Tornado
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And Hell Followed With It: Life and Death in a Kansas Tornado ReviewThis book could be called a very entertaining historical novel except for the fact that it is based on real characters who play themselves and a real natural event more dramatic than fiction. Bonar does an exceptional job of weaving the lives of dozens of real people into the compelling story of their existence before and after a monster tornado that leveled much of a major US city.
Incredible detail is also provided concerning weather myths, forecasts and the city and state. Two major myths that were destroyed by the tornado were that Burnetts Mound would protect the city and that the southwest corner of a basement was the safest location during a tornado. It is hard to believe that the author was able to bring a 44 year old event to life and make it as fresh as if it happened yesterday. This book deserves a wide audience.And Hell Followed With It: Life and Death in a Kansas Tornado OverviewA stunning, illustrated account of devastation and survival in the wake of one of America s most destructive tornadoes. Colossal trees snap like matchsticks. A gigantic orange fireball explodes in the funnel's black core. Horses are sucked up and spit out alive by 200-mile-per-hour winds. These were just a few of the scenes that unfolded on June 8, 1966, when a massive EF-5 tornado cut a 22-mile swath across eastern Kansas and straight through Topeka--Kansas's capital city. When it was over, 16 people were dead, more than 500 were injured, and property damage had reached $100 million, making the tornado the most destructive in U.S. history up to that time. That fateful day comes back to life in And Hell Followed With It: Life and Death in a Kansas Tornado. Author Bonar Menninger has interviewed dozens of survivors to construct a tightly woven narrative that conveys in gut-wrenching detail what it's like when nature careens out of control and ordinary people face extraordinary, life-threatening situations. The book features dozens of remarkable photographs, as well as a series of engaging, hand-drawn maps that place readers alongside individuals in the book as the tornado approaches.

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Scanning the Skies: A History of Tornado Forecasting Review

Scanning the Skies: A History of Tornado Forecasting
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Scanning the Skies: A History of Tornado Forecasting ReviewIn Scanning The Skies: A History of Tornado Forecasting, Marlene Bradford highlights the development of the US tornado forecast and warning systems from the earliest inception to the modern, multi-component, highly technical system in place today.
Ms Bradford begins the book with the historical background into the theories of tornado formation and the early attempts to predict tornadoes in the United States. The major focus of the story, however, begins a little more than a century ago when the first scientific inquiries and debates as to the nature and causes of tornadoes began. Much of the limited early debate appears to have focussed on the negative aspects of a tornado forecasts, even speculating that more would die from panic or illnesses contracted while huddled in damp storm cellars than from the storms themselves! The US Weather Bureau, recognizing the difficulties in forecasting tornadoes and fearing public panic from any such forecasts, actually forbade use of the word "tornado" in any forecast until 1938.
When the author reaches the state of tornado knowledge during and just after the World War II years, she reaches the true heart of the story. Bradford gives us a well-documented account of the friction between military and civilian storm forecasters in the post-war years that was sparked by the first storm warnings produced within the US military weather service. She takes us from the events leading up to the first "official" tornado warning forecast of Major Ernest Fawbush and Captain Robert Miller issued on March 25, 1948 to the modern forecast and warning system used today by the US Storm Prediction Center.
Having brought the warning system development to the new century, Bradford concludes the book with a chapter an the evaluation of the effectiveness of the integrated tornado warning system over the past several decades. Her analysis shows a difficulty in proving the question as to whether such a system has saved enough lives for the cost of development, implementation and function.
I have no real criticism of Scanning The Skies. Readers looking for more technical material on the scientific aspects of the history of tornado forecasting may be disappointed in this book as it only briefly and superficially discusses scientific advances that lead to improvements of the tornado warning system (such as the development of Doppler radar). Recognizing that the book is intended to present the history of the process of developing a tornado warning system and not about the science behind it, I feel a little more attention could have been given to some of the more relevant scientific aspects with a few diagrams for clarification as to what forecasters look for when developing a tornado watch or warning forecast.
If you are interested in tornadoes or in disaster prevention and warning programs, I think you will find Scanning The Skies an enjoyable and informative read. Scanning The Skies is a well- written historical account of the rise of the modern tornado forecasting and warning system as well as a peek at the workings within government as agencies vie for control and funding while simultaneously trying to avoid criticism.Scanning the Skies: A History of Tornado Forecasting Overview
Tornadoes, nature's most violent and unpredictable storms, descend from the clouds nearly one thousand times yearly and have claimed eighteen thousand American lives since 1880. However, the U.S. Weather Bureau--fearing public panic and believing tornadoes were too fleeting for meteorologists to predict--forbade the use of the word "tornado" in forecasts until 1938.

Scanning the Skies traces the history of today's tornado warning system, a unique program that integrates federal, state, and local governments, privately controlled broadcast media, and individuals. Bradford examines the ways in which the tornado warning system has grown from meager beginnings into a program that protects millions of Americans each year. Although no tornado forecasting program existed before WWII, the needs of the military prompted the development of a severe weather warning system in tornado prone areas. Bradford traces the post-war creation of the Air Force centralized tornado forecasting program and its civilian counterpart at the Weather Bureau. Improvements in communication, especially the increasing popularity of television, allowed the Bureau to expand its warning system further.

This book highlights the modern tornado watch system and explains how advancements during the latter half of the twentieth-century--such as computerized data collection and processing systems, Doppler radar, state-of-the-art television weather centers, and an extensive public education program--have resulted in the drastic reduction of tornado fatalities.




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F5: Devastation, Survival, and the Most Violent Tornado Outbreak of the 20th Century Review

F5:  Devastation, Survival, and the Most Violent Tornado Outbreak of the 20th Century
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F5: Devastation, Survival, and the Most Violent Tornado Outbreak of the 20th Century ReviewF5 is the designation for the most destructive of tornadoes. Of course, there is plenty of description of destruction in this book. But, what sets this book apart from typical "weather junkie" books is the description of injury and emotional pain. You come to know three good families and some assorted, fascinating people, including a heck of a good county sheriff and a tornado expert who is almost weird, he is so enthusiasic about the storms. You see how some of these people are struck down. You see how the survivors suffer afterwards. F5s are not just destructive. They are horrible. In the book they seem to be almost alive and deliberately attacking the innocent. A hell of a good story of what some people went through thirty years ago.F5: Devastation, Survival, and the Most Violent Tornado Outbreak of the 20th Century Overview

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