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Katrina: The Ruin and Recovery of New Orleans

af The Times-Picayune

MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingSamtaler
471540,455 (5)Ingen
Katrina did not end when the hurricane's eye passed New Orleans on August 29, 2005. It did not end when the last of the flood waters were pumped out of a city below sea level and residents who had fled to 50 states began to return. The worst urban disaster in American history was not over as the 2006 hurricane season opened in June and the Army Corps frantically raced to complete rudimentary repairs to the levee system that had failed so catastrophically. In 192 pages packed with images of destruction and revival, this book hints at the scope of the devastation and at the resilience of a city that has resolved to survive it. Katrina was much more than wind and flooding. Lives were torn apart as surely as houses and landscapes. Nor can it rightly be called a natural disaster. Engineering failures underlay the levee breaches and politics clouded and confounded the relief and recovery efforts.… (mere)
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CAVEAT: I don't own this book, but a librarian friend of mine has mentioned to me that it is more a political commentary than a documentary volume, and I quote him here: "Nowhere, I repeat NOWHERE, does it even mention the Coast Guard. Navy either, for that matter. It is so dedicated to blaming the federal government that they apparently couldn't bring themselves to casually mention that some agencies did it right...Sadly, a generation from now, young people will read the darned thing and not realize [that the] Coast Guard, et al,[were even there]."
  laytonwoman3rd | Mar 1, 2007 |
ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
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Katrina did not end when the hurricane's eye passed New Orleans on August 29, 2005. It did not end when the last of the flood waters were pumped out of a city below sea level and residents who had fled to 50 states began to return. The worst urban disaster in American history was not over as the 2006 hurricane season opened in June and the Army Corps frantically raced to complete rudimentary repairs to the levee system that had failed so catastrophically. In 192 pages packed with images of destruction and revival, this book hints at the scope of the devastation and at the resilience of a city that has resolved to survive it. Katrina was much more than wind and flooding. Lives were torn apart as surely as houses and landscapes. Nor can it rightly be called a natural disaster. Engineering failures underlay the levee breaches and politics clouded and confounded the relief and recovery efforts.

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