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Loading... Breach of Faith: Hurricane Katrina and the Near Death of a Great American…by Jed Horne
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A compelling account written shortly after Katrina, detailing the New Orleans catastrophe. Includes personal accounts of damage and survival, theories on levee breaches, and infuriating accounts of failed leadership. The Coast Guard (also affirmed in other accounts) and individual acts of rescue and recovery are the only admirable post-Katrina characters in Horne's book. La. Governor Kathleen Blanco is also exonerated as the details of her actual pre- and post-Katrina actions are reviwed and the Republican vilification of her, and Louisiana, are revealed. This is probably the first overall look at Katrina that I've read, other than maybe Cooper & Bloch's "Disaster: Hurricane Katrina and the Failure of Homeland Security" (which was primarily focused on the federal government's response to the disaster so is not really so general). _Breach of Faith_ is strongest when it relates personal anecdotes, when it really digs into the real-life calculus that goes into deciding whether to evacuate or not, and how the storm and resulting flood affected rich and poor equally, though in different ways. The book ends in the spring of 2006, so already much of the recovery narrative seems somewhat dated. He talks about the mayoral election but does not discuss the outcome; regardless, Nagin's performance is not given a pass. Horne holds out his harshest criticism for the Feds, obviously, but not in the detail that Cooper and Bloch do. And for some perplexing reason, it seems Horne has a wee crush on Governor Blanco; she comes across as a shrewd tower of strenght who is merely misunderstood by the media...clearly a year's worth of Road Home headlines would have sucked the wind out of that angle if Horne could have seen into the future a little. There's also a lot of fawning over Ivor van Heerden and Bob Bea, two characters whose reliability and motives are still open issues, in my view. It's a worthy read simply for the stories of regular people, though. I was enthralled for those chapters, less so for the later material about floodwall forensics, Bea, Ivor, and the Corps. (One complaint which others might find minor, but which I found highly distracting: he consistently fails to capitalize things like "coast guard", "army corps", etc., even though he is clearly talking about THE Coast Guard and THE Army Corps of Engineers. Drove me up a wall, it did. Also misspelled a few street names. Arggggg.) If you only read one book about Katrina and its aftermath, this is the one. Thoughtful, insightful, accurate (unlike Brinkley) -- Horne effectively combine intimate personal stories with historical background and the larger political and social turmoil. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)
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