Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America by John M. Barry

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(Paperback - Bargain)

  • Pub. Date: April 1998
  • 422pp

    Reader Rating: (12 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Research" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 1998
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 422pp

    Synopsis

    An American epic of science, politics, race, honor, high society, and the Mississippi River, Rising Tide tells the riveting and nearly forgotten story of the greatest natural disaster this country has ever known -- the Mississippi flood of 1927. The river inundated the homes of nearly one million people, helped elect Huey Long governor and made Herbert Hoover president, drove hundreds of thousands of blacks north, and transformed American society and politics forever.

    A New York Times Notable Book of the Year, winner of the Southern Book Critics Circle Award and the Lillian Smith Award.

    Annotation

    The author of The Ambition and the Power now dissects the story behind the great Mississippi River flood of 1927--an untold American epic of money, race, culture, and empire in New Orleans and the Delta, and of one family--the Percys--whose members ruled a state, hunted with presidents, and defeated the Ku Klux Klan. Illustrations. 512 pp. 75,000 print.

    David Futrelle

    On a quiet day, the Mississippi River seems to flow as gently as a burbling brook, but that outward calm is deceiving. "The Mississippi never lies at rest," John M. Barry writes in his often fascinating account of the Great Flood of 1927. "It roils. It follows no set course. Its waters and currents are not uniform. Rather, it moves south in layers and whorls, like an uncoiling rope made up of a multitude of discrete fibers, each one following an independent and unpredictable path, each one separately and together capable of snapping like a whip." And when the river begins to fill with more water than it can handle, it becomes quite a formidable force indeed -- as generations of Americans have learned.

    Rising Tide tells the story of a slow-motion, not-quite-natural disaster of tremendous proportions. The proximate cause of the disaster was the rain that fell on the Midwest in torrents for months and months without pause, saturating the earth and overflowing the innumerable tributaries that flow into the Mississippi River. But the disaster was magnified, as many disasters are, by human hubris -- in this case the hubris of 19th century engineers who firmly believed (with typical Victorian confidence) that even this great river could be reined in. The levees they built to contain the river in many ways exacerbated the disaster, raising it to higher levels and increasing both its speed and its force -- so that when the levees fell (as, faced with the record rains of 1927, they inevitably would) the damage was more severe than would have been the result of a flood uncontained, or better controlled with a combination of outlets and reservoirs alongside the levees. Ultimately, nearly one million Americans were left homeless by the flood. Several hundred lost their lives, it is estimated.

    Barry tells the tale of the flood through the stories of the "large men" whose words and actions most influenced its course -- from head Army engineer Andrew Atkinson Humphreys, whose stubborn insistence on a "levees only" policy in the 19th century contributed mightily to disaster in the 20th, to powerful Sen. LeRoy Percy of Mississippi (grandfather of novelist Walker Percy). Though at its best it's as gripping as a good disaster flick, Rising Tide can meander as unpredictably as the river itself. Barry spends too much time hashing over biographical details and not enough elucidating the effects of the river's slow fury.

    Despite these flaws, Rising Tide is both a bracing history and a cogent warning. In an age when self-professed futurists speak blithely of living in virtual worlds beyond the prison of human flesh and the laws of physics, it is worth remembering that nature has a habit of reasserting itself. -- Salon

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    Biography

    John M. Barry is the author of The Ambition and the Power: A True Story of Washington, and co-author of The Transformed Cell, which has been published in twelve languages. As Washington editor of Dunn's Review, he covered national politics, and he has also written for The New York Times Magazine, Esquire, Newsweek, The Washington Post, and Sports Illustrated. He lives in New Orleans and Washington, D.C.

    Customer Reviews

    Rising Tide - Book Review - Eric DeLongby EJDeLong

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    March 23, 2009: This was an excellent book. I gave it five stars. The book was interesting from start to finish. The information about the engineers who first sought to control the river, the mistakes made at a later date to control the river, the 1927 Missippippi flood, the stories of the local politicians, and the political ramifications at the national level after the flood all make this a great read. I do not come across more than a few books a year that I would consider to be of the high quality of this book.

    What I didn't know - and then someby jwminnyc

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    March 23, 2009: Absorbing, very well written and researched... and so much information about an important historical event combined with a saga of wealth, greed, power, and corruption. Most importantly is the exposure of just how horribly black people in the South were treated. Even the Italians came in for a bit of moral turpitude. A real eye-opener!


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