|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
In 1955 the small town of Udall, Kansas, was home to oil field
workers, homemakers, and teenagers looking ahead to their futures.
But on the night of May 25, an F5 tornado struck their town without
warning. In three minutes the tornado destroyed most of the
buildings, including the new high school. It toppled the water
tower. It lifted a pickup truck, stripped off its cab, and hung the
frame in a tree. By the time the tornado moved on, it had killed 82
people and injured 270 others, more than half the town's population
of roughly 600 people. It remains the deadliest tornado in the
history of Kansas. Jim Minick's nonfiction account, Without
Warning, tells the human story of this disaster, moment by moment,
from the perspectives of those who survived. His spellbinding
narrative connects this history to our world today. Minick
demonstrates that even if we have never experienced a tornado, we
are still a people shaped and defined by weather and the events
that unfold in our changing climate. Through the tragedy and hope
found in this story of destruction, Without Warning tells a larger
story of community, survival, and how we might find our way through
the challenges of the future.
Finding a Clear Path intertwines literature, agriculture, and
ecology as author Jim Minick takes the reader on many journeys,
allowing you to float on a pond, fly with a titmouse, gather
ginseng, and grow the lowly potato. The reader visits monarch
butterflies and morel mushrooms, encountering beavers, black
snakes, and bloodroot along the way. Using his background as a
blueberry farmer, gardener and naturalist, Minick explores the
Appalachian region and also introduces information that can be
appreciated from a scientific point of view, explaining, for
example, the ears of an owl, or the problems with the typical
Christmas tree. Reading this collection of essays invites you to
search for ways to better understand and appreciate this marvelous
world, opening paths for journeys of your own.
|
|