The I Index

A Furious Sky: The Five-Hundred-Year History of America’s Hurricanes

Maybe someday

37

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

56/100

Critics

17/100

Scholars

N/A

Author:

Eric Jay Dolin

Publisher:

Liveright

Date:

August 4, 2020

With A Furious Sky, best-selling author Eric Jay Dolin tells the history of America itself through its five-hundred-year battle with the fury of hurricanes.

What The Reviewers Say

Lyn Millner,
Los Angeles Review of Books
... chapter one is a lull in an otherwise compelling book—a dry accounting of Europeans settling the New World while hurricanes interfered. The story picks back up when Benjamin Franklin watches what he believes are two consecutive storms.
Elizabeth Kolbert,
The New York Times Book Review
...[a] lively chronicle of five tempestuous centuries ...At the start of A Furious Sky, Dolin, who has written several previous books on maritime topics, writes that 'hurricanes have left an indelible mark on American history.' He suggests that it’s particularly important to attend to this mark now because climate change is only going to make storms 'more powerful and more destructive in the future.' But he never develops a clear argument as to what the societal impact of hurricanes has been (besides a lot of devastation and death), or what we can expect it to be going forward (aside from more of the same). Where A Furious Sky is most compelling is in its often harrowing details. It’s filled with haunting personal stories..
Barbara Bamberger Scott,
Bookreporter
Dolin, who has a doctorate in environmental sciences, has created a highly readable and densely fact-filled study. Most Americans remember at least one particular hurricane --- from childhood, direct experience or the memories of an earlier generation --- whether because of dreadful loss, unsettling fears or a near-miss. And through this literate survey, they can recall, re-examine and understand it in finer detail..
James Pekoll,
Booklist
Dolin’s weather drama reveals just how horrific these monster storms can be. But this compelling book is much more than a meteorological history, it is a remarkably human story of people struggling with nature at its fiercest and the myriad ways hurricanes have affected the course of human events.