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The Great Hurricane: 1938 [Paperback]

Cherie Burns (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 5, 2006
On the night of September 21,1938, news on the radio was full of the invasion of Czechoslovakia. There was no mention of any severe weather. By the time oceanfront residents noticed an ominous color in the sky, it was too late to escape. In an age before warning systems and the ubiquity of television, this unprecedented storm caught the Northeast off guard, obliterated coastal communities, and killed seven hundred people.

The Great Hurricane: 1938is a spellbinding hour-by-hour reconstruction of one of the most destructive and powerful storms ever to hit the United States. With riveting detail, Burns weaves together the countless personal stories of loved ones lost and lives changed forever — from those of the Moore family, washed to sea on a raft formerly their attic floor, to Katharine Hepburn, holed up in her Connecticut mansion, watching her car take to the air like a bit of paper.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Post-Hurricane Katrina, Burns' meticulously researched account of a hurricane that devastated the New England coast hits home even more than it would have before. Fields' reading is perfectly tuned to the way the tragedy unfolded, so while there are no sound effects or other extras, the modulations in her voice provide tension and emotion to spare. Burns uncovered myriad personal stories about the experience, and as Fields relates the struggles of one individual after another during the day it struck, the listener is caught up intimately in the drama. Fields does an excellent job of highlighting, with notes of amazement, New Englanders' initial response to the storm-some were pleased at the excitement, and many were so unworried that they carried on stubbornly with their plans for weddings and picnics-but she also inflects her voice with appropriate dark foreboding. As Burns builds up a background for understanding the storm's effect, listeners may be bored by the long but somewhat generic descriptions of 1930s American life. Fortunately, any such feelings are more than countered by the minute details she has gathered of people's actions before and during the hurricane, which create a vivid picture in the listener's mind and make it feel all the more tragic to hear about the unprecedented havoc wrought by the wind and rain.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

From Booklist

Burns investigates one of the deadliest natural disasters in New England's history. Although pipped at the post by R. A. Scotti's Sudden Storm: The Great Hurricane of 1938 (2003), Burns' rendition is solid and will engage the imaginations of those who wonder, as she posits, "What would I have done?" In September 1938, nothing in the sky seemed unduly threatening to the late-summer vacationers and fishermen of eastern Long Island and Rhode Island, and the weather service did nothing to disabuse them of that notion. Establishing background by recounting people's livelihoods in the Depression and their immediate activities on the day of the disaster, such as travel plans, a wedding ceremony, or work at the Providence Journal, Burns follows several survivors through the ordeal. The clouds gather, the winds increase, the tide rises, and the terrible realization comes that no escape is possible. Integrating data of the storm's force and the coastal topography that intensified its devastation, Burns perceptively distills the experience of a tragedy that swept away some 700 lives. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Grove Press (June 5, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0802142540
  • ISBN-13: 978-0802142542
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.5 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #548,355 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Cherie Burns is author of the upcoming biography of Standard Oil heiress and fashion icon Millicent Rogers. Searching for Beauty-The Life of Millicent Rogers will be published by St. Martin's Press on September 13, 2011.
The author's previous book, The Great Hurricane: 1938, was published by Grove/Atlantic (2005) in soft and hardcover. Jonathan Yardley of The Washington Post wrote: "Her own very good book is sure to help keep the terrible storm in its proper place in New England's memory..", and Liz Smith wrote in her column in The Daily News that the book was "A must if you care about brilliant reporting..." "Before there was the Perfect Storm, there was the Great Hurricane of 1938. Cherie Burns's new book is not only a riveting and wonderfully written account of one of the worst storms of the century, it is a marvelous portrait of an era and a region. A must for all New Englanders and lovers of the sea," said National Book Award winner Nathaniel Philbrick, author of In the Heart of the Sea and Sea of Glory.
Burns's first book, Stepmotherhood--How to Survive Without Feeling Frustrated, Left Out or Wicked (Times Books) has been reprinted by HarperCollins and Three Rivers and has sold over 40,000 copies in the U.S., England and Germany. It has remained in print for 20 years. Ms. Burns' work has also appeared in The New York Times Magazine, People, Glamour, New York, Sports Illustrated, Constitution and other publications. She currently lives in Taos, New Mexico. See more about the author and the above titles at www.cherieburns.com.

 

Customer Reviews

21 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (21 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping account of New England's worst storm, July 16, 2005
As author Cherie Burns notes more than once in her wonderful new book, "The Great Hurricane: 1938", it's hard to believe that with all the advances in meteorology over the past half-century that there could still today have been a time in people's memories where they were taken by surprise by such a large and deadly hurricane. Yet, that's exactly what happened on September 21, 1938 when New England (and Long Island) bore the brunt of this storm.

What struck me immediately was the fact that people didn't refer to such storms in New England as "hurricanes"...those were storms that hit Florida and the Caribbean. New Englanders were used to "nor'easters" and this one was referred to as the "big blow". The results, after only four hours of onslaught were, of course, devastating. Moving at an incredible sixty miles per hour, "GH38" (as the author calls it) made landfall on the eastern shore of Long Island, creating havoc there before it slammed into Connecticut. Rhode Island suffered the most damage, death and injury as GH38 wiped out most of the shoreline, including an entire small community, Napatree Point, before surging waters overwhelmed the city of Providence. More than seven hundred people died overall and the cost in terms of casualties and property loss would be counted for weeks.

Ms. Burns has an eye for detail and a dramatic narrative style that lends itself well to a book about a natural disaster. She relates that the United States was recently emerging from the shadows of the Depression and gives us reminders not just of life in general, but of people's every day activities. It's her careful approach to this aspect which helps put down a foundation for her story. The bonding elements, though, are those people who actually lived through that awful day...the reader gets to know them as if they were our own next-door neighbors. Her compilation of the collective memories of those she writes about are stirring. Some managed to keep a sense of humor as their worlds were falling apart around them while others simply suffered terrible consequences from the wrath of the storm. The most famous survivor of GH38 was Connecticut's Katharine Hepburn, whose house in Fenwick floated one third of a mile downstream. But this book really belongs to another Catherine...Catherine Moore, whose Rhode Island house broke apart after her family and others had taken refuge in the attic. Just after the wind blew the roof off, they managed to make the attic floor a raft and away they sailed, ending up on Barn Island in Connecticut. Catherine's split-second decisions combined with a fair amount of luck, undoubtedly saved her family.

As she nears the end of the book, Cherie Burns sums up the catastrophe in largely human terms. I laughed out loud when I read about the irony of a lumber mill operator in Brookline, Massachusetts. The farm lost two hundred trees and the author writes, "the owner set up a sawmill to salvage building lumber, and the rest was stacked in woodpiles to burn in stoves and fireplaces. The supply would last until 1980, when her grandson burned the last bundle". This warm, humorous anecdote helps to offset the tragedy of the great hurricane of 1938. Cherie Burns has put together a terrific book about a terrible day, and as I read it in one sitting, I highly recommend it.

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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Poorly researched and badly in need of an editor., June 28, 2006
This review is from: The Great Hurricane: 1938 (Paperback)
What a disappointment! I'd looked forward to reading this book and now I'm sorry I wasted my money. It covers the same ground as Scotti's "Sudden Sea" but does so with far less ability.

It's repetitious and as another reviewer mentioned, reads like an eighth-grade report on a hurricane. Early on in my reading, I was blaming the editor. The repeated references to there being no satellite or radar tracking of storms in 1938 (does the author really think we need frequent reminders of this?) and rich folks playing down their wealth, the overusage of words like "portentous" and "anyhow" and the unfortunate metaphor of hurricane as "cat" could have been cleaned up (along with some typos) by a good editor. The author thanks her editor in the acknowlegments, so the mind boggles at what the manuscript must have looked like before the final edit.

But what pushed me over the edge were the frequent factual errors, the blame for which lies solely with the author, not the editor. Here are a few:

The author claims that in 1938, the start of the school year fell around October 1. That gave me pause, but I was willing to go with it until I found multiple references in the remainder of the book to children on their way to or from school on the day of the storm.

The author describes the newroom of the Providence Evening Bulletin (which she later refers to, incorrectly, as the "Providence Bulletin") during the storm and in the next sentence says "things weren't going any better for workers at the Providence Journal." Well, duh. The Providence Evening Bulletin and the Providence Journal were the evening and morning editions of the same paper, published on the same presses, from the same newsroom at the same address and by the same reporters.

The author describes someone as being able to look up the bay and see "the lights on the bridge from Barrington to Bristol." There is no such bridge. There is a very small bridge from Barrington to Warren, whose lights were not likely to be visible outside the harbor, and a much larger bridge, the Mt. Hope Bridge, visible up and down the bay, which connects Bristol to Aquidneck Island.

The author references the situation at City Hall in Providence and in the next sentence says "next door at the Hope Club". The Hope Club is not next door to City Hall, nor is it anywhere downtown. The Hope Club is on College Hill, on Benefit Street.

The author describes action taking place at the intersection of Orange St. and Fawcett St. in downtown Providence. There is no Fawcett St. in Providence. Did she mean Friendship Street? Who knows?

In recounting tree damage, the author says, "In Providence, Goddard Park..." Goddard Park is not in Providence, it's in North Kingstown, approximately 20 miles away.

There are more, but after factual error piled upon factual error, I lost the will to go on reading. All of these errors could have been easily fixed with the most cursory of fact-checking. But clearly, the author couldn't be bothered.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An unheralded disaster, June 24, 2008
This review is from: The Great Hurricane: 1938 (Paperback)
What lessons do we learn from ferocious weather? This planet is our home and our playground and it's easy to forget that we're at the mercy of the elements -- until Mother Nature throws us a hard ball like the Great Hurricane of 1938. Thundering into Long Island, Connecticut and Rhode Island, this great storm devastated homes, farms and commercial areas. Hundreds of thousands of trees were blown down, transportation and essential services were disrupted, and seven hundred people lost their lives.

Author Cherie Adams sets the scene: 1938 is poised between the Great Depression and the start of World War II. The front-page stories are focusing on the annexation of Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland region by the Third Reich. Weather prediction is slow and unreliable, so nobody worries that the inside pages of the newspaper are predicting high winds and heavy rain.

The eastern coastal regions are enjoying the last weeks of nice weather along the shore. In comes the hurricane, with an exceptional forward speed of 60 miles per hour. Whatever difference warning might have made, there is no warning and the winds, rain and solstice-swelled storm surge wreck everything in their path.

Adams' weather scenes are vivid and her statistics at the end are quite awesome. Her sources are letters, newspaper stories and other written reports, as well as whatever eyewitness accounts are available so long after the event. She presents the human side of the disaster in strobe-like jumps from one "character" to another, never developing any of them fully so that they blur into a confusion. Some stand out--the wedding party, the schoolboy in a new suit, the cameo appearance of actress Katharine Hepburn--but most are like too many snapshots of strangers in someone's old album.

I'm not sure what I wanted from this book. A better understanding of life in 1938? Meteorological context? Most of all, probably, insight into the strength of character that helps individuals survive a cataclysmic loss. I came away feeling that I would have done better to re-read Sebastian Junger's "The Perfect Storm," or even--reaching back to 1977--"Condominium" by John D. McDonald. Or the best idea of all, one might find the original stories, articles, memoirs, and read them in the writers' own words.

I listened to an unabridged audio presentation of this book so did not have the benefit of any maps or photos, of which I understand from other reviewers there were too few. The book shows intensive research and the writing is effective, though the organization is not what I would have preferred. Three stars.

Linda Bulger, 2008
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