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  1. Island in a Storm

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  • Legal name: Abby Sallenger
  • Birthdate: (add)
  • Birthplace: Anapolis, Maryland
  • Nationality: USA
  • Gender: Male
  • Official Website: http://www.AbbySallenger.com
  • Genres: narrative nonfiction

Unbound edit see section history

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Library of Congress talk on Abby Sallenger's Island in a Storm





Brief talk on Abby Sallenger's Island in a Storm at Fountain Books, Richmond, VA





See feature in the New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/01/scienc...

Hear NPR Morning Edition piece: 
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story...

Review highlights: 

"In ISLAND IN A STORM one of America's top oceanographers--Abby Sallenger--documents the perils of coastal erosion. Using Isle Derniere as case-study, Sallenger brilliantly explains what happens when the sea rises and land disappears. A very important book!" 
-- Douglas Brinkley, Professor of History, Rice University and author of The Great Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans, and the Mississippi Gulf Coast 

"Fast-moving narrative... He makes it all vivid and immediate and very human..." 
-- Susan Larson, New Orleans Times Picayune 

"Sallenger provid(es) us with a window into the tragedy as if we are standing on the beach feeling the sand sting our eyes and the waters rise up our bodies... It's a riveting account of a horrible disaster." 
-- Chere Coen, Lafayette Advertiser 

"Sallenger goes into wonderful detail about the geography of the Last Island, how and when it formed and what happened to it in the storm... "<R:>eally good book... " 
-- Greg Langley, Baton Rouge Advocate 

"The book unwinds compelling narrative about life in mid-1800s Louisiana, the storm itself, all while integrating an important public policy message about the vulnerability of living on unprotected coastlines. <A:> finely written narrative, I highly recommend the book..." 
-- Eric Berger, Houston Chronicle, SciGuy Blog 

“Few authors have been able to convey with such clarity and power the complex geologic processes of coastal waters under storm conditions, particularly the chaotic commingling of ocean waves, tidal currents, storm surges, sand erosion, and elevated sea level that can at times cause wholesale destruction of such fragile, low-lying landforms of sand.”
-- Choice Magazine

"Rarely does a book combine fascinating story-telling, regional history, and a science lesson in one compelling package. Island in a Storm does just that. The tale is more than 150 years old, but there are real lessons to be learned for coastal communities on today's vulnerable barrier islands." 
-- Robert S. Young PhD, director, Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines, Western Carolina University, co-author of The Rising Sea 

"Island in a Storm tells the riveting story of one of America's greatest hurricane disasters--the ravaging of Louisiana's Isle Derniere by the notorious Last Island Hurricane of 1856. ... Sallenger's first-class story-telling of the remarkable tales of survival ... make this a book well worth reading." 
-- Jeff Masters, PhD, Director of Meteorology, Weather Underground, Wunder Blog 

"Abby Sallenger expertly combines the history of a hurricane and its disastrous impact with the fascinating science of hurricanes and coastal geology. He illustrates the dangers that a rising sea, a subsiding coast, and hurricanes pose to populated shores, and with a loud wake up call, he warns policymakers and home owners who insist on building or rebuilding on barrier islands." 
-- Ellen Prager, PhD, chief scientist, Aquarius Reef Base and author of Chasing Science at Sea 

"This is a wonderful book, a must-read for anyone interested in our future, which shows how historic tragedies can be lessons, especially as climate change speeds along its merry way." 
-- Ivor van Heerden, PhD, deputy director, LSU Hurricane Center, and author of The Storm: What Went Wrong and Why During Hurricane Katrina--the Inside Story from One Louisiana Scientist 

"A masterful page-turner juxtaposing the remarkable parallel tales of the survival by a 19th century Creole maiden of a catastrophic hurricane with the staggering geological perils confronting the residents of the fragile Gulf coastline today." 
-- Bethany Ewald Bultman, author of Reflections of the South, Compass New Orleans, and Compass Gulf South, and the descendent of thirteen victims of the 1856 Isle Dernier Hurricane