Destination: Louisiana Coast
Book: Island in a Storm: A Rising Sea, A Vanishing Coast, and a Nineteenth-Century Disaster That Warns of a Warmer World, by Dr. Abby Sallenger
A Guest post by Dr. Jessie Voigts
I’ve got THE BEST book to share with you today. Authored by Abby Sallenger, PhD, [amazonify]1586485156::text::::Island in a Storm: A Rising Sea, A Vanishing Coast, and a Nineteenth-Century Disaster That Warns of a Warmer World[/amazonify] is a glimpse of life in another century, where storms have power but surviving them was much different than it is today.
In the mid-nineteenth century, in Louisiana (a foreshadowing of Hurricanes Ike and Katrina), a powerful hurricane hit the Gulf Coast, sunk ships, ended or changed lives, and almost erased a barrier island, the resort-island, Isle Derniere. This book combines history, geography, geology, and the true story of people who lived through this storm – and the challenges they faced in the 1856 storm (and afterward). Sallenger writes compellingly of the people who lived through it. He did extensive historical research on the families involved, as well as geological facts that not only teach us about this storm and its aftermath, but teach us that we need to learn from history in order not to repeat it. However, we can still see development happening along coastlines in this country that repeat the mistakes of the past.
We were lucky enough to sit down and talk with Abby, about his book, doing research, and listening to the earth. Here’s what he had to say…
Wandering Educators: Please tell us about your book, Island in a Storm…
Abby Sallenger: Island in a Storm is set in Louisiana, but develops lessons relevant to problems faced along U.S. coasts today. The story is about a hurricane that swept ashore in the mid-nineteenth century, killing half the people on a barrier island called Isle Derniere. It’s a true story of the sea rising relative to the land—and the land changing in ways that made the island, and the people who lived there, vulnerable to a great storm. It’s about the people who faced that hurricane, and how they came into harm’s way by seemingly disparate, sometimes odd intersections of science, culture, disease, and agriculture. In the end, the book is about an island dying and what this means for the world’s barrier islands in a warmer world.
Go to Wandering Educators to read the rest of the interview with Dr. Sallenger.

Dr. Jessie Voigts
Dr. Jessie Voigts is the Publisher of WanderingEducators.com and contributes each month to A Traveler’s Library. She has a doctorate in International Education, and is passionate about intercultural learning. She and her husband are Worldschooling their daughter, and enjoying every minute of it. She is also a nature photographer and lives on a lake.
The phenomenal storm photo accompanying this post is from Flickr, click photo for more info. Although it is not an island off Louisiana, it is an island in a storm.
Thanks so much Jessie, for another great contribution to A Traveler’s Library and to our bookshelves. If you want to read about another disappearing island, see Surviving Paradise
See the post just above this one for the First Grand Prize of the Great Big Travel Literature Giveaway and information on how to win.
Tags: author interview, global warming, Louisiana, storms, Travel


Twitter: chezsven
says:
Thanks for writing about this book. Here on Cape Cod, houses have survived hurricanes for years, but we are all too conscious that storms have become more powerful and The Big One might hit our end of the Cape and change life as we know it.
.-= Alexandrahopes you will read blog ..High-Court Corporate-Money Decision On My Mind =-.
I have flipped though this book at the bookstore. I have a relative that lived through Katrina, and Sallenger’ s “Island in a Storm: A Rising Sea, A Vanishing Coast, and a Nineteenth-Century Disaster That Warns of a Warmer World” was of great interest to me when it was released. The human stories are fascinating. And we should pay close attention to the warning that we recieve from this tragedy. Thank you for reviewing the book.
Twitter: WanderingEds
says:
thanks, vera, for sharing this interview. i LOVED reading this book.
.-= jessievhopes you will read blog ..Where the Road Goes =-.