A Flood is Much More Than a Lot of Water
After reading this book, I can see why the back cover of my edition is filled with glowing reviews and lists of honors and awards. This is an epic, scholarly story recounting the economic, political, and social history of the lands and peoples of a Lower Mississippi Valley region called 'The 'Delta', a vast strip of the Mississippi River floodplain east side of the river with Greenville, Mississippi as its commercial and cultural hub. The history of the region is told through the lives of its most powerful and influential people and framed by observations of the river and region from the days of the first Spanish explorers to the election of Huey Long and the dark days of the Great Depression. These latter events effectively marked the end of the insular, rich, white, power structure that had dominated the region since before the Civil War. Skillfully woven into this saga are the natural history of the river, accounts of earlier flood events, and analyses of competing hydrologic and hydraulic theories that shaped levee construction, flood control projects, and navigational improvements prior to the 1927 flood. With each new levee or flood control project, land prices surged and once-'useless wetlands and swampy forests were opened to settlement and agricultural development. Power was exercised, speculators thrived, and fortunes were made. The great flood of 1927 exposed a fickle sense of security and well-being nestled behind a flood control infrastructure riddled with shortcomings and an inability of local to national, private and governmental organizations to deal effectively with the flood and its chaotic aftermath. The 'final taming' of the Lower Mississippi took shape as a massive public works project, portending fundamental changes in the federal government's prerogatives and scope of responsibilities to emerge later during the Great Depression. Many readers will 1) retool their ideas about the post-Civil War history of land ownership and race relations in this part of the South; 2) visualize the flood event as basin-wide in nature and six months in the making; and 3) recognize that the flood played a pivotal role in how we, as a society, now respond to disasters, provide for post-disaster reconstruction, and enact land-use policies designed to reduce loss of life and property damages. I enjoyed the book and would strongly recommend it. However the reader is forewarned. Have a U. S. atlas handy; the only map in the book depicts the entire Mississippi drainage basin.
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Overview
An American epic of science, politics, race, honor, high society, and the Mississippi River, Rising Tide tells the riveting and nearly forgotten story of the greatest natural disaster this country has ever known — the Mississippi flood of 1927. The river inundated the homes of nearly one million people, helped elect Huey Long governor and made Herbert Hoover president, drove hundreds of thousands of blacks north, and transformed American society and politics forever.
A New York Times Notable Book of the Year, winner of the Southern Book Critics Circle Award and the Lillian Smith Award.
The author...