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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A chilling novel about a horrible chapter in our history
Once again Mr. Volponi creates a fast paced story that will engage readers.

Miles cannot stand living with his mother and his new stepfather. The apartment is too cramped, there are too many kids, and Miles has to escape. His mother finally allows him to move in with his father, a man he hasn't seen for most of his life. Miles is only in New Orleans for a few...
Published on August 13, 2008 by YA Librarian

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Adults and teens alike
Hurricane Song is a story about a father and son in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. I picked this up off the new books display at the local library and wow. This is a difficult book to read, but one that I imagine will become more popular as we move on from Hurricane Katrina.

Miles is living with his dad, a jazz musician, in New Orleans when Katrina...
Published on May 24, 2009 by S. C. Mulhern


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A chilling novel about a horrible chapter in our history, August 13, 2008
This review is from: Hurricane Song (Hardcover)
Once again Mr. Volponi creates a fast paced story that will engage readers.

Miles cannot stand living with his mother and his new stepfather. The apartment is too cramped, there are too many kids, and Miles has to escape. His mother finally allows him to move in with his father, a man he hasn't seen for most of his life. Miles is only in New Orleans for a few days when Hurricane Katrina hits.

The reader is given a vivid and often painful narrative of what life was like in the Superdome. We see these events through Miles' eyes. He is a frightened, confused young man who struggles to understand the inhumanity that is taking place around him. As always, Mr. Volponi does not shrink away from uncomfortable situations and paints a very realistic vision of what happened during those horrible days inside and outside the Superdome.

This is a very powerful book about a sad chapter in our country's history.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Drops you into the eye of the storm, August 12, 2008
This review is from: Hurricane Song (Hardcover)
Hurricane Song vividly drops you in the eye of the chaos that followed-- the nightmarish days and nights we all heard about inside the Superdome.
17-year-old Miles is sent to live with his Jazz musician father in N.O. He has been estranged from his father for most of his life but Miles is yearning to connect with the old man. Unfortunately, Katrina bears down on them a few days after he gets there and they find themselves stranded trying to escape the city. They end up at the Superdome and what follows is all the more harrowing because we know it's based on facts. Volponi puts you right into the stiffling heat and Lord of the Flies madness that took over the city. Like New Orleans, their relationship is severely tested, falls apart but somehow rises from the ashes like the music that beats in the heart of the city. This is a vivid, compelling read, ripe for any teen, but especially for boys. A must read and a true experience that needs to be remembered. Check it out!
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5.0 out of 5 stars A powerful and realistic YA novel about Hurricane Katrina, September 22, 2011
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This review is from: Hurricane Song (Hardcover)
Another extraordinary book by "The King of YA Urban Fiction!" This powerful novel chronicles the experience of Miles, his pop, and uncle at the Superdome in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. At times heart-wrenching, shocking, and inspiring - HURRICANE SONG won't let us - nor should we - forget what our brothers and sisters went through to survive this natural disaster.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, August 10, 2009
This review is from: Hurricane Song (Mass Market Paperback)
Gold Star Award Winner!

Miles has been living in Chicago with his mother and has recently moved to New Orleans to live with his father. His father left the family years ago to play jazz music. Miles knows that his father's life is his music, but when his mother remarried and the family in Chicago increased by three kids, he knew he had no choice. Taking a chance on his father seemed like the only way to go.

So far, the two months father and son have spent together haven't been all that great. Miles is looking forward to playing football and maybe even making the varsity team at his new school. Unfortunately, he knows he probably won't see his dad at any of his games. His dad can't even remember that it's football Miles plays and not basketball.

When news that a huge hurricane is heading toward New Orleans reaches them, Miles, his father, and his uncle pile into the car with the idea of heading toward Baton Rouge and higher ground. The traffic is terrible, and the car soon overheats, leaving them stranded on the highway. As the storm gets closer, their only option is to follow the rest of the evacuees to the shelter at the Superdome.

In the several days Miles and his family spend at the Superdome, the storm batters the exterior of the massive building while the interior suffers from a "storm" of its own. When tired, frightened people are crowded into a facility not equipped to handle the situation, there are bound to be problems. In those few days, Miles experiences horribly unsanitary conditions, watches as thugs threaten, beat, and steal from innocent people, and sees death and suffering no person should ever have to witness.

Most of us watched the drama of Katrina unfold on our TVs, but Miles's experience brings us the reality of the actual storm and those first days afterward. Sadly, many are still suffering and trying to recover years later. Everyone should read this book as a reminder that our country reacted poorly in the early stages of the disaster, and even at this late date, not enough has been done to help rebuild the lives of so many.

Reviewed by: Sally Kruger, aka "Readingjunky"
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3.0 out of 5 stars Adults and teens alike, May 24, 2009
This review is from: Hurricane Song (Hardcover)
Hurricane Song is a story about a father and son in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. I picked this up off the new books display at the local library and wow. This is a difficult book to read, but one that I imagine will become more popular as we move on from Hurricane Katrina.

Miles is living with his dad, a jazz musician, in New Orleans when Katrina hits. They evacuate to the Superdome when their car breaks down on the freeway out of town. Their experiences in the Superdome are absolutely horrific. I found myself having to put the book down sometimes because it was so difficult to read. Powerful and important, I can see this becoming a part of high school or college reading in the future, when the pain from Katrina isn't so fresh.

Be aware, this is not a middle grades book. It is definitely YA, due to language and the things that Miles and his family experience. I would even recommend this to adults, due to the power of Volponi's descriptions of this national, natural disaster.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Hurricane Song with get into your soul, October 19, 2008
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This review is from: Hurricane Song (Hardcover)
The Hurricane Song by Paul Volponi.Hurricane Song is a novel about a boy and his father and the hell they went through during Hurricane Katrina. The author was eerily accurate and had to have researched well because this story, while a work of fiction, could very well be true.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible YA Novel, August 4, 2008
This review is from: Hurricane Song (Hardcover)
Like the review from VOYA says--It's either the best YA novel of 2008 or the most important. An Incredible look at a teen and his jazz musician dad surviving Katrina and the Superdome. Powerful and important.
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Hurricane Song
Hurricane Song by Paul Volponi (Mass Market Paperback - June 25, 2009)
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