1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910149759103321

Autore

The Washington Post The Washington

Titolo

After the Storm : Katrina 10 Years Later

Pubbl/distr/stampa

New York : , : Diversion Publishing Corp., , 2015

©2015

ISBN

9781682301340

1682301346

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (72 pages)

Disciplina

976.335

Soggetti

Hurricane Katrina, 2005 - Social aspects

Social change

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

After the Storm: Katrina 10 Years Later -- Copyright -- Introduction -- Chapter One: The Resilience Lab --   'I am a gentrifier' --   'Nieux' money --   'We have hipsters now' --   Where zombies roam --   Dancing to the right beat -- Chapter Two: The Man Who Saved 400 People -- Chapter Three: The Lost Lower Ninth -- Chapter Four: The Road Ahead --   A rebirth in Bay St. Louis --   Left behind in East Biloxi --   A life reclaimed in Long Beach -- Chapter Five: The Next Big One --   Rising seas, sinking land --   The battle over diversions --   Delays ahead -- Chapter Six: The last time I saw my mother -- Chapter Seven: Moving On -- Chapter Eight: The Diaspora -- More from The Washington Post… -- Connect with Diversion Books

Sommario/riassunto

The aftermath was almost as devastating as the storm itself. In the ten years since Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, New Orleans has changed drastically, and The Washington Post returns to the region to take the full measure of the city's long, troubled, inspiring, unfinished comeback. When Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast on Aug. 29, 2005, it wrenched more than a million people from their homes and forever altered New Orleans-one of the country's cultural capitals. It reordered the city's economy and population in ways that are still being felt today. What changed? And what was lost in the intervening decade? Dozens of Washington Post writers and photographers descended on New Orleans



when Katrina hit, and many of those same journalists went back for the anniversary. What they found was a thriving city, buttressed by a new 14.5 billion complex of sea walls, levees, pump stations and outfall canals. What they heard was that, while some mourn the loss of the New Orleans' soul and authenticity, others-who saw a desperate need for improvement even before the storm-welcome the rebuilding of New Orleans into America's latest tech hub. This insightful, elegiac eBook, then, is both a backward and forward look at New Orleans' comeback, full of the voices of those who were pushed by Katrina's winds in directions they never imagined. "The city, on balance, is far better off than before Katrina," says Jason Berry, a prolific New Orleans author. "But it's still a break-your-heart kind of town."