Red River Rising is a gripping read with all the tension and memorable characters of a good whodunit. The tale is the story of the 1997 flood that devastated a number of towns in the Northern Great Plains. Author Ashley Shelby chose to concentrate on Grand Forks, North Dakota, because the story of the town\u27s demise and recovery could be the story of any American community unexpectedly destroyed and then left to pick up the pieces and rebuild. Shelby said she learned from her journalist father that the only way to tell the story is to talk to the people who lived it, and she talked to a great many of them
Few environmental disasters match the drought years of the 1930s. Drought extended well beyond the G...
Review of the book A River and Its City: The Nature of Landscape in New Orleans, by Ari Kelman. Ber...
Marvin Gloege has assembled an impressive array of information about demographic trends affecting th...
Alice Fothergill has performed a great service by reporting about events often overlooked, glossed o...
Jane Varley\u27s Flood Stage and Rising opens with what becomes the haunting echo of the narrative, ...
The upper West Texas area is a huge region of the southern Great Plains. Including the Rolling Plain...
As a storm chaser and meteorologist myself, I admit my expectations for this book by an outsider w...
Anthony Rasporich says that a sense of struggle, of painful discovery, and loss of innocence in th...
Visitors to Fort Rice State Historic Site have little idea of the drama that took place there during...
Of all the ways in which history can be written and remembered, human based environmental change is ...
Most writers would be hard pressed to encounter a better story line, a deeper, richer vein of raw ma...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...
Parker Horrigan's slim but densely layered volume presents multiple viewpoints of narratives that em...
The Oklahoma City bombing informs each sentence here, Tracy Daugherty tells us, becoming the epice...
On August 5, 2015, contractors for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) investigating the ...
Few environmental disasters match the drought years of the 1930s. Drought extended well beyond the G...
Review of the book A River and Its City: The Nature of Landscape in New Orleans, by Ari Kelman. Ber...
Marvin Gloege has assembled an impressive array of information about demographic trends affecting th...
Alice Fothergill has performed a great service by reporting about events often overlooked, glossed o...
Jane Varley\u27s Flood Stage and Rising opens with what becomes the haunting echo of the narrative, ...
The upper West Texas area is a huge region of the southern Great Plains. Including the Rolling Plain...
As a storm chaser and meteorologist myself, I admit my expectations for this book by an outsider w...
Anthony Rasporich says that a sense of struggle, of painful discovery, and loss of innocence in th...
Visitors to Fort Rice State Historic Site have little idea of the drama that took place there during...
Of all the ways in which history can be written and remembered, human based environmental change is ...
Most writers would be hard pressed to encounter a better story line, a deeper, richer vein of raw ma...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...
Parker Horrigan's slim but densely layered volume presents multiple viewpoints of narratives that em...
The Oklahoma City bombing informs each sentence here, Tracy Daugherty tells us, becoming the epice...
On August 5, 2015, contractors for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) investigating the ...
Few environmental disasters match the drought years of the 1930s. Drought extended well beyond the G...
Review of the book A River and Its City: The Nature of Landscape in New Orleans, by Ari Kelman. Ber...
Marvin Gloege has assembled an impressive array of information about demographic trends affecting th...