The Hurricane
by Hugh Howey
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Daniel Stillman has 42 Facebook friends. His cell phone contains 18 contacts, two of them for pizza delivery. Six people follow him on Twitter. Four readers subscribe to his blog; he's pretty sure one of them followed him on accident.And now a category 5 storm is about to wipe all this away.
In its wake will be left a single girl, a neighbor he never knew, and a new reprieve from the digital maelstrom of his life, a great silence like the eye of some terrific storm.
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Unlike the other books I have read (and loved) by Hugh Howey, this one is a “regular” book (not scifi, post-apocalyptic, or dystopian) for young adults about a hurricane that devastates the town of Beaufort, North Carolina.
Daniel Stillman, 17, feels like an outcast in high school. He doesn’t fit in with any of the “cliques": the jocks, the preps, the hipsters, the gamers…. He thinks he must be just too dull - he dresses in normal clothes, he lacks confidence with girls, and doesn’t even have a smartphone like everyone else. The other kids scorn him as a “rando, a creeper, a sketch.”
Then Hurricane Anna hits, with the eye right over Beaufort. Daniel and his family (mom, stepdad Carlton, and younger sister Zola) take show more refuge in the bathroom in the center of the house. Trees come down everywhere, and they end up with a big hole in their house. Daniel’s estranged dad shows up with a chainsaw, and they and the other neighbors set about the business of cleaning up and rebuilding.
With the power out for a week, suddenly people are forced to interact with one another rather than with their digital devices, and Daniel’s family gets to know each other and their neighbors really for the first time. Daniel meets a nice, smart girl only four houses away, ironically named Anna, who has been home-schooled, precisely to avoid the kind of social pressures that have tormented Daniel.
Evaluation: This is a very sweet and quiet story, with a sort of delayed impact, much as one might experience from being in the eye of a storm. Daniel has an appealing, self-deprecating sense of humor. Howey is adept at conveying the different fears and insecurities members of his family feel both before and during the storm. The family dynamics are well done, and Howey never sugarcoats the family’s relationship with either the Stepdad or the Dad.
I thought the blurbs about the plot misrepresented it. I found it to be a good coming of age story, not really a parable about digital overload. show less
Daniel Stillman, 17, feels like an outcast in high school. He doesn’t fit in with any of the “cliques": the jocks, the preps, the hipsters, the gamers…. He thinks he must be just too dull - he dresses in normal clothes, he lacks confidence with girls, and doesn’t even have a smartphone like everyone else. The other kids scorn him as a “rando, a creeper, a sketch.”
Then Hurricane Anna hits, with the eye right over Beaufort. Daniel and his family (mom, stepdad Carlton, and younger sister Zola) take show more refuge in the bathroom in the center of the house. Trees come down everywhere, and they end up with a big hole in their house. Daniel’s estranged dad shows up with a chainsaw, and they and the other neighbors set about the business of cleaning up and rebuilding.
With the power out for a week, suddenly people are forced to interact with one another rather than with their digital devices, and Daniel’s family gets to know each other and their neighbors really for the first time. Daniel meets a nice, smart girl only four houses away, ironically named Anna, who has been home-schooled, precisely to avoid the kind of social pressures that have tormented Daniel.
Evaluation: This is a very sweet and quiet story, with a sort of delayed impact, much as one might experience from being in the eye of a storm. Daniel has an appealing, self-deprecating sense of humor. Howey is adept at conveying the different fears and insecurities members of his family feel both before and during the storm. The family dynamics are well done, and Howey never sugarcoats the family’s relationship with either the Stepdad or the Dad.
I thought the blurbs about the plot misrepresented it. I found it to be a good coming of age story, not really a parable about digital overload. show less
This was a really enjoyable read. I suggest reading it during a summer thunderstorm, or maybe while power is out during/after a hurricane.
I read Howey’s Wool series, along with just about everything else he has written. He’s a solid writer, and excels at capturing the emotion of people trapped in dire situations. The plots are often vastly different, but that really doesn’t matter when the writer is focused on the human condition. Teenage coming-of-age stories are not my forte; in fact, I usually avoid them. I’m glad I read/listened to this one, and found a story that is exceptionally easy to connect to.
The story is relatively simple: day-to-day living is completely knocked on its head and the main character and his friends and show more family are put into a situation that forces them to see things from a different perspective, which, in turn, forges new relationships and adjusts their social paradigms. I also liked because I was just like Daniel during high school: an outcast. Granted, we didn’t have cellphones, texting, Facebook, or any of the other “modern” technology, but that didn’t make it any less painful. Mr. Howey captures this pain in great detail, and even better, how Daniel grew through it, and ending up closer to adulthood at the end of the story.
The only real issue I had with the book was the choice of the narrator. The story was set in Beaufort, SC, and the dialogue was spoken with the proper southern drawl. The narrative, though, like the descriptions of the destruction from the hurricane was spoken with a British accent, which was quite confusing and annoying. I’m curious why the narrator chose to speak in what I’m assuming is his normal voice when the rest of the book was “southern”. Pretty odd, if you ask me. show less
I read Howey’s Wool series, along with just about everything else he has written. He’s a solid writer, and excels at capturing the emotion of people trapped in dire situations. The plots are often vastly different, but that really doesn’t matter when the writer is focused on the human condition. Teenage coming-of-age stories are not my forte; in fact, I usually avoid them. I’m glad I read/listened to this one, and found a story that is exceptionally easy to connect to.
The story is relatively simple: day-to-day living is completely knocked on its head and the main character and his friends and show more family are put into a situation that forces them to see things from a different perspective, which, in turn, forges new relationships and adjusts their social paradigms. I also liked because I was just like Daniel during high school: an outcast. Granted, we didn’t have cellphones, texting, Facebook, or any of the other “modern” technology, but that didn’t make it any less painful. Mr. Howey captures this pain in great detail, and even better, how Daniel grew through it, and ending up closer to adulthood at the end of the story.
The only real issue I had with the book was the choice of the narrator. The story was set in Beaufort, SC, and the dialogue was spoken with the proper southern drawl. The narrative, though, like the descriptions of the destruction from the hurricane was spoken with a British accent, which was quite confusing and annoying. I’m curious why the narrator chose to speak in what I’m assuming is his normal voice when the rest of the book was “southern”. Pretty odd, if you ask me. show less
This was a sweet coming-of-age tale. It's billed as a romance, but I wouldn't call it that. It's more like the male version of chick lit. Boy is a loser in high school, boy has a dysfunctional family, boy envies his best friend. Then a hurricane wrecks the town and everything changes for him. It's a sweet tale. There's no science fiction or supernatural elements. But Howey is a more-than-competent writer, and the narrative pulled me along.
When a town loses the ability to digitally connect due to a hurricane, how do people react? I thought this plot would be a typical, anti-technology utopian theme, but it isn't. The main characters do find something new about their lives when it's not dominated by digital technology, but not in an oversimplified way.
Subtle, but still quickly paced. A good balance of interesting plot and interesting characters.
Subtle, but still quickly paced. A good balance of interesting plot and interesting characters.
Not what I expected, but quite good nonetheless. A fantastic flashback to all the angst of high school with the added bonus of a bit of end of the world fear.
Daniel è un ragazzo non connesso: pochi amici nella realtà e su facebook, un cellulare arcaico e i tipici tratti dell'adolescente emarginato e deriso.
E infatti tutto va come da copione fino all'arrivo di Anna, un uragano di proporzioni epiche che sconvolgerà la cittadina.
La natura forzerà tutti a rinunciare alla connessione continua e la vita di Daniel subirà notevoli svolte.
E infatti tutto va come da copione fino all'arrivo di Anna, un uragano di proporzioni epiche che sconvolgerà la cittadina.
La natura forzerà tutti a rinunciare alla connessione continua e la vita di Daniel subirà notevoli svolte.
Young Adult transitioning to adulthood. Seemed a bit overdone at the beginning with over emphases on aloneness and isolationism of a boy. Finding the deeper connections that can be found with family when in time of danger and stress.
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Hugh Howey is an American author who was born in 1975 and raised in North Carolina. Howey is known for his popular series Wool, which he independently published through Amazon.com's Kindle Direct Publishing system. The Wool series first began in 2011 with Wool as a stand-alone story. In 2012, Howey signed a deal with Simon and Schuster to show more distribute Wool to retailers in the USA and Canada. The book became a trilogy with Shift (Book 2) and Dust (Book 3) following it. The author has renamed this to the Silo Series. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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