The Big Blow
by Joe R. Lansdale
On This Page
Description
Peculiar weather settles over a bustling Texas sea port, a city made prosperous off the cotton trade and thick with racial inequality. The sky above Galveston, Texas, darkens to the sickly green of a healing bruise, the sea turns black, and the inhabitants of the city have no idea the force of the hammer about to drop on them. The wild wind blows boxer John McBride into town, a white prize fighter with seemingly superhuman fury and skill. As black boxer Jack L'il Arthur Johnson prepares to show more fight this fierce opponent, the storm closes in. If he can survive the ring and the vicious undercurrents of the Jim Crow south, L'il Arthur will still have to fight his way through the storm winds, the rising flood waters, and the violent night. On September 8, 1900, a hurricane ripped apart Galveston, Texas, killing nearly 8,000 people and nearly obliterating the town. Lansdale's story brings dimension to many who lost their lives that day, and a few who survived. Contains mature themes. show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
An extremely racist boxing match is arranged for the day of the catastrophic Galvestown Flood. The white boxer, as loathesome a piece of work as ever appeared in a Lansdale book, is supposed to kill the black boxer. Also, everybdy has lots of sex, some in healthier and less toxic ways than others. Actually, no, most of it is nasty and toxic. Meanwhile, out on the Gulf, a storm is building the likes of which has never been seen before. The waters start to rise, people start to get nervous, but the boxing match must go ahead.
Lansdale's deliberately rough and raw storytelling is matched by the savagery of the storm. The ending is gutwrenching, but Lansdale's a master, so it's also unexpectedly moving. Still one of his most memorable works.
Lansdale's deliberately rough and raw storytelling is matched by the savagery of the storm. The ending is gutwrenching, but Lansdale's a master, so it's also unexpectedly moving. Still one of his most memorable works.
The Big Blow is an excellent piece of historical fiction by Joe R. Lanndale that uses the 1900 Galveston Hurricane (one of the deadliest natural disasters in american history) as a backdrop to explore racist attitudes during the turn of the century. As winds and waves rapidly build off the coast, rich country club owners ship in cutthroat pugilist John McBride to take the club championship from local black man 'Lil' Arthur Johnson, who won it during what was considered a novelty fight between him in the club's white champion.
True to his writing style, Lansdale exposes the vulgarity and violence dominating society, while simultaneous shining a flashlight on the dark underbelly of history. His fictionalized accounts of the Galveston show more Hurricane are as emotionally jarring and captivating as his portrayal of the racism inherent in American society just a little over a century ago. show less
True to his writing style, Lansdale exposes the vulgarity and violence dominating society, while simultaneous shining a flashlight on the dark underbelly of history. His fictionalized accounts of the Galveston show more Hurricane are as emotionally jarring and captivating as his portrayal of the racism inherent in American society just a little over a century ago. show less
Well-done story set during the Galveston hurricane. Lansdale is a hell of a writer, no matter what he takes on.
Fino all’ottobre del 1900, Galveston fa a gara con New York per il titolo di città più vivace e stimolante degli Stati Uniti. All’inizio di quel mese, un uragano la rade al suolo, un disastro da cui non si riprenderà più. Il romanzo breve di Lansdale narra i giorni di quella tragedia grazie a intense pagine, intrecciando alcune piccole storie di gente comune attorno a quella principale della sfida al mal sopportato campione di pugilato locale, il nero Jack Johnson, da parte del rozzo ma energico bianco Jim McBride. E’ quest’ultima figura, seppur sgradevole, il vero motore del libro, in questo vincendo il confronto con il suo avversario di colore. L’abilità dello scrittore sta però nell’evitare che gli altri personaggi show more ne vengano oscurati: descritti con magari poche ma incisive frasi, tutti inscrivono il loro nitido profilo nella mente del lettore. In tale capacità di sintesi sta uno dei tanti pregi che segnano le pagine dell’autore texano, oltre all’estrema scorrevolezza e al ritmo serrato della narrazione scandito da dialoghi taglienti: così, le singole figure si muovono all’inseguimento dei loro piccoli o grandi sogni sullo sfondo del cupo avanzare della tempesta, che sovrasta tutto e tutti, colpevolmente ignorato anche se sempre più minaccioso. La serena alba del giorno dopo illumina la descrizione impietosa di una devastazione che richiederà anni di lavoro per essere superata: sopra di essa, qualche flebile filo di speranza che però non evita ai sopravvissuti un futuro in un mondo immutato o (spesso) peggiore rispetto a quello che conoscevano. show less
Oct 6, 2016Italian
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Bram Stoker Award
238 works; 5 members
Author Information

438+ Works 19,655 Members
Joe R. Lansdale was born in Gladewater, Tex. in 1951. He attended Tyler Junior College, the University of Texas at Austin, and Stephen F. Austin State University. Lansdale has also had a varied career, having worked as a bouncer, a bodyguard, a transportation manager, a custodian, and a karate instructor before becoming a fulltime writer in 1981. show more Lansdale's written work includes several novels and more than 200 short stories. Although his favorite genre is fantasy, with suspense a close second, he has also written mysteries, horror, science fiction, and westerns. Some titles include Rumble Tumble, Dead in the West, The Nightrunners, Cold in July, By Bizarre Hands and The Drive-in (a 'B' Movie with Blood and Popcorn. Made in Texas) . In addition, Lansdale has edited the short-story anthologies Best of the West, The New Frontier: Best of the West 2, and Razored Saddles. Lansdale has received five Bram Stoker Awards from the Horror Writers of America, including one for "The Night They Missed the Horror Show." He has also been awarded the British Fantasy Award and the American Horror Award. Joe Lansdale and his second wife, Karen, have two children. They live in Nacagdoches, Tex. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Awards
Work Relationships
Is an expanded version of
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Big Blow
- Original publication date
- 2000
- People/Characters
- Jack Johnson
- Important places
- Galveston, Texas, USA
- Important events
- 1900 Galveston Hurricane
- First words
- The inhabitants of those islands we now call the West Indies, at least once a year, found their paradise subject to a horrible god that brought savage wind and rain, and finally devastation. They called their terrible god Hur... (show all)akan.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Jack watched until he disappeared behind a swell of lumber and bodies, and he never saw him again.
- Original language
- English
- Disambiguation notice
- Novel expanded from the novella published under the titles "Rainy Weather" and "The Big Blow."
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Horror, Historical Fiction
- DDC/MDS
- 813.54 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999
- LCC
- PS3562 .A557 .B5 — Language and Literature American literature American literature Individual authors 1961-
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 92
- Popularity
- 347,948
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (4.08)
- Languages
- English, German, Italian
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 8
- ASINs
- 2




























































