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Voices From the Storm:
reviews

Voices from the Storm has received some very positive reviews from various news outlets. Below are some of those reviews.


New Orleans Times-Picayune
"Lift Every Voice: Katrina Survivors and Rescuers Tell Their Stories"
By Susan Larson

Monday, December 18, 2006

The books that tell the stories of the storms and flood of 2005 are still emerging—from works of fine photography, to scholarly collections of essays, volumes of poetry and first person narratives, books devoted to single issues.

Among the most recent is McSweeney's Books' "Voices from the Storm: The People of New Orleans on Hurricane Katrina and Its Aftermath," edited by Lola Vollen and Chris Ying. McSweeney's is the publisher of the Voice of Witness series, which began in 2005 with "Surviving Justice: America's Wrongfully Convicted and Exonerated," edited by Lola Vollen and Dave Eggers. The intent of the series is to examine human rights crisis in the U.S. and throughout the world through oral histories.

"Voices from the Storm" includes oral histories from 13 New Orleanians. They are Patricia Thompson, mother of six and a resident of the William J. Guste housing development; Renee Martin, a clinical nursing assistant who lives on the West Bank; Jackie Harris, music promoter and founder of the Louis Armstrong Summer Jazz Camp; Rhonda Sylvester; Dan Bright, who was wrongfully convicted of first-degree murder in 1996 and released in 2004; the Rev. Jerome LeDoux of St. Augustine Church in Treme; the Rev. Vien The Nguyen, pastor of Mary Queen of Vietnam Church in eastern New Orleans; Sonya Hernandez, mother of five; writer and teacher Kalamu ya Salaam; trumpeter and "master chef" Kermit Ruffins; artist Daniel Finnigan; Anthony Letcher of the 9th Ward; and Abdulrahman Zeitoun, a Syrian native who owns a construction business.

These 13 very diverse citizens introduce themselves in individual narratives; then their voices intertwine in a chronological account of Aug. 27-Sept. 4, 2005, followed by a chapter taking place weeks later, then an epilogue, "Looking Back."

This is painful reading indeed, but inspiring, too. Father LeDoux's account of weathering the storm in Treme and Father Nguyen's memories of keeping his community together in eastern New Orleans are particularly moving stories of heroic men of faith in a testing time.

Later would come more tests: the struggles of St. Augustine have been well documented, as has the unity of the Vietnamese community, which has risen so strongly to meet post-Katrina challenges. But even now, to read Father Nguyen's account of staying behind with a sick parishioner, waiting for help that never comes—the shock of what human beings endured here just never goes away.

Kalamu ya Salaam, a longtime commentator on and participant in New Orleans culture, writes of watching the disaster unfold from his refuge in Houston, lamenting the ignorance of the national media.

"They had no idea. They were just covering a disaster. They had no idea of the geography," he said, citing the losses of St. Bernard Parish, the Vietnamese community, the large Honduran community that only later came to light.

For others, struggles were matters of life and death. Abdulrahman Zeitoun, out in a canoe doing rescue work and feeding trapped animals, was arrested and kept in custody for weeks, deprived of the most basic legal rights, accused of terrorism, of all things. Dan Bright, picked up on a misdemeanor charge, made a harrowing escape from parish prison. Rhonda Sylvester found herself on the interstate near Lakeside Shopping Center. Patricia Thompson, along with 22 members of her household, attempted to cross the bridge into Jefferson Parish, but was turned back by armed police. Later, when she emerged from the convention center, it was to see armed guards with weapons trained on her 5-year-old granddaughter. Renee Martin was stranded in the Superdome.

Some, such as Anthony Letcher, found a kind of redemption in his struggles as he found himself rescuing family and acquaintances. He says, "I was glad I was able to help. I ain't looking for nothing in return, nothing. Well, maybe a little thing from God....

"That water was hectic ... a lot of lives got tossed around. Ain't but the grace of God all my family got out of it, nobody got left behind, killed. We're not mourning deaths. So that's good. I rather mourn my property and my $157 Timberland boots. I rather mourn them than have to mourn a person's death. That's cool with me. God is good. All my family's straight, man."

"Voices from the Storm" is a powerful book with a clear agenda that draws its strengths from the real voices of real New Orleanians.


Boston Weekly Dig
"The Year in Books: Katrina kills, Yankees suck, whores swallow"
By Susan McCarty, Paul McMorrow, and Luke O'Neil

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

The second book from McSweeney’s human-rights oral history project, Voices from the Storm compiles 13 devastating narratives from Hurricane Katrina refugees. One, Abdulrahman Zeitoun, was performing rescue work when he was arrested for suspicion of terrorism; another, Dan Bright, was left for dead in a flooding jail cell by prison guards; Rhonda Sylvester loaded children into buckets and floated them to dry land, only to be dumped on an abandoned highway; Patricia Thompson went looking for food and water, and had the military’s automatic weapons leveled at her 6-year-old granddaughter’s head. Captivating, devastating stuff.

Multimedia
VoW Podcast Episode 1

lListen to Dan Bright as he recounts his arrest the night before Hurricane Katrina, and harrowing escape from Orleans Parish Prison.

Podcast | Photos

Dave Eggers on Air America

VoW series editor Dave Eggers on the Rachel Maddow Show on Air America.

Stream | Download

Kermit Ruffins Interview Sound Clip
An excerpt from our interview with Kermit Ruffins, New Orleans trumpet player and local legend:

Stream | Download

“I realize my responsibility now, especially after the Katrina thing... It’s just so incredible to me when I realize what I’m doing and what’s goin’ on before the storm, so now it’s kind of like double that or triple that…” Read the full excerpt...
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