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Almost every year, areas of the Midwest are subjected to massive flooding. Sandbags are filled and stacked, FEMA arrives, and there is a discussion of whether this is a 500-year flood, a 1,000-year flood, or just another typical summer season. This new book looks at a town devastated and rebuilt--that will likely be rebuilt again when the next years' waters rise and puts it in context with the history of the region and the people who have lived there for generations.
An inspiring story of the epic 2008 floods-and one devastated community's will to rebuild Every year, flooding wreaks havoc
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Produktbeschreibung
Almost every year, areas of the Midwest are subjected to massive flooding. Sandbags are filled and stacked, FEMA arrives, and there is a discussion of whether this is a 500-year flood, a 1,000-year flood, or just another typical summer season. This new book looks at a town devastated and rebuilt--that will likely be rebuilt again when the next years' waters rise and puts it in context with the history of the region and the people who have lived there for generations.
An inspiring story of the epic 2008 floods-and one devastated community's will to rebuild Every year, flooding wreaks havoc across much of the Midwest. But the floods of 2008 were on a scale unlike anything seen in generations. From Minnesota to Missouri, Illinois to Iowa, the "1,000- Year Flood"-as some climatologists called it-caused tens of billions of dollars worth of damage along the Mississippi River and its tributaries. Two dozen people were killed and 148 injured. Between 35,000 and 40,000 people were evacuated from their homes. The human stories associated with this epic event are riveting. The 1,000-Year Flood is a powerful tale of heroism, heart-wrenching loss, and hope. Looking at the epic events of the summer of 2008-and, in particular, at the devastated city of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and its will to rebuild-Stephen J. Lyons weaves a compelling and inspiring narrative set against the backdrop of a millennium of natural disasters in the region. He asks: What does the flooding mean for residents short-term and long-term? What does recovery really mean?
Autorenporträt
Stephen J. Lyons is the author of A View from the Inland Northwest: Everyday Life in America (Globe Pequot) and Landscape of the Heart (Washington State University). He is two-time recipient of a fellowship in prose writing from the Illinois Arts Council and has published articles, reviews, essays, and poems in numerous anthologies and publications, including Newsweek, Chicago Tribune, Washington Post, Salon, and High Country News.