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1 Dead in Attic: After Katrina door Chris…
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1 Dead in Attic: After Katrina (editie 2007)

door Chris Rose

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
6212737,986 (4.18)57
"1 Dead in Attic is a collection of stories by Times-Picayune columnist Chris Rose, recounting the first harrowing year and a half of life in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Celebrated as a local treasure and heaped with national praise, Rose provides a rollercoaster ride of observation, commentary, emotion, tragedy, and even humor--in a way that only he could find in a devastated wasteland. They are stories of the dead and the living, stories of survivors and believers, stories of hope and despair. And stories about refrigerators. 1 Dead in Attic freeze-frames New Orleans, caught between an old era and a new one, during its most desperate time, as it struggles out of the floodwaters and wills itself back to life."--Page 4 of cover.… (meer)
Lid:wood4wv
Titel:1 Dead in Attic: After Katrina
Auteurs:Chris Rose
Info:Simon & Schuster (2007), Paperback, 364 pages
Verzamelingen:Jouw bibliotheek, Aan het lezen
Waardering:
Trefwoorden:HOME, Nonfiction, essays, Katrina, 21st Century, New Orleans

Informatie over het werk

1 Dead in Attic: After Katrina door Chris Rose

  1. 00
    Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans? door David Rutledge (lilithcat)
    lilithcat: These are two of the most powerful books about Katrina I've read, probably because they were written in the immediate aftermath of the hurricane. They don't have an agenda, except, perhaps to tell the truth about what happened, from very personal points of view.… (meer)
  2. 00
    Nine Lives: Death and Life in New Orleans door Dan Baum (lilithcat)
  3. 00
    Zeitoun door Dave Eggers (BookshelfMonstrosity)
    BookshelfMonstrosity: A columnist for the New Orleans Times-Picayune, Rose delves into the aftereffects of the storm on his adopted city in this compelling collection of essays.
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» Zie ook 57 vermeldingen

1-5 van 27 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
My husband bought me this book at an independent bookstore in New Orleans last year when he chaperoned a music trip at his school. I was not sure what to expect, but I was pleasantly surprised to get op-eds and creative pieces about living through the year and a half after Hurricane Katrina hit. The writing style is vivid and in-the-moment, which blends journalism and travel narrative well. ( )
  DrFuriosa | Dec 4, 2020 |
Award winning Times Picayune columnist Chris Rose was literally embedded with his story, fleeing hurricane Katrina right before it hit. He sent his family to safety in Maryland while he continued to live, work and report on life in New Orleans in the months that followed. This is a compilation of his columns which still appeared when the Picayune could only publish on-line for a time in the aftermath of the storm. It's difficult to maintain journalistic objectivity when you're living the story, so Rose can hardly be blamed for the toll his reporting took on him personally. It's a harrowing story that doesn't shy away from the horror or the hope. ( )
  varielle | Jul 23, 2019 |
This sounds like a ridiculous criticism given the subject matter, but I found this book far too sentimental. Chris Rose was a beat reporter at the Times-Picayune when Hurricane Katrina smashed into New Orleans, and in the aftermath he started writing these short columns about how the city was recovering and how the community was coping; they're supposed to be snippets of personal commentary rather than journalism per se, which perhaps explains the register. Nevertheless, for me the saccharine emotionality of Rose's writing detracted from, rather than reinforced, the impact of what he was describing.

In an open letter to ‘America’, published in September of '05, he introduces the area in a way that gives you a good idea of his general tone:

I suppose we should introduce ourselves: we're South Louisiana.

We have arrived on your doorstep on short notice and we apologize for that, but we were never much for waiting around for invitations. We're not much on formalities like that. …

We're a fiercely proud and independent people, and we don't cotton much to outside interference, but we're not ashamed to accept help when we need it. And right now, we need it. …

When you meet us now and you look into our eyes, you will see the saddest story ever told. Our hearts are broken into a thousand pieces.

But don't pity us. We're gonna make it. We're resilient. After all, we've been rooting for the Saints for thirty-five years. That's gotta count for something. …

So when all this is over and we move back home, we will repay you the hospitality and generosity of spirit you offer us in this season of our despair.

That is our promise. That is our faith.


There's really two options when writing about very serious and traumatic situations: either you become as dry as humanly possible (on several occasions I've sat in newsrooms next to people who were openly sobbing as they typed up their notes, but to read their report you'd think they were observing what happened from a distant satellite, not covered in blood and shit in the middle of what was happening – and the story became devastating through that distance); or, you go full gonzo and do a first-person subjective immersion à la Tom Wolfe or Hunter S Thompson.

Rose chooses not to attempt the former, and is not able to do the latter because, as he says, he himself suffered nothing more serious that a broken drainpipe on his house. So he's stuck in this awkward no-man's-land, inhabiting a kind of borrowed communal misery, buttressed with folky false modesty and clichés of determination, which is completely understandable and even admirable but which doesn't make for powerful journalism.

I feel really bad criticising this, since it's obvious that Rose was utterly traumatised by Katrina – ‘it beat the shit out of me,’ he says – and indeed, a lot of what is in here reads less like a chronicle of a ruined city, and more like a chronicle of someone succumbing to PTSD. (Rose in fact became addicted to antidepressants during this period and separated from his wife.) Still, I wish there had been a little more journalistic examination of the situation – the class and race issues which Katrina brought into such sharp relief are almost entirely absent here.

These columns do make for a revealing snapshot of what a city looks like after a big disaster (so much of what was in here reminded me of being in Port-au-Prince after the earthquake), with the lines of refrigerators on the streets, the fallen trees, the smell of masonry dust and decomposition, the hair-trigger emotions of everyone left. It's partly an audience problem. These pieces didn't connect well with me as an outsider, but when Rose wrote them, they were aimed at his fellow Louisianans, and for that audience who understood exactly what he was going through they probably worked really well. ( )
1 stem Widsith | Mar 8, 2019 |
Katrina happened nine years after I had moved away. I resisted my instant urge to return and try to help, but it was very hard to watch the misery daily and from a distance. Chris Rose's moving and truthful book (which is indeed raw, as another reviewer said) documents the experience in such intimate (and to a former resident, familiar) ways that I felt almost that I had been there. If you love New Orleans deeply, read this book.
1 stem laursand | Jul 31, 2017 |
This book is only 364 pages, which I usually read in a day or two at most. This book took me three months. Rose is a journalist and this is a compilation of columns he wrote post-Katrina. It's raw. So raw that I had to be very careful how much I read, because it was too heavy sometimes. But it's IMPORTANT. If you've been to New Orleans, even now, 10 years later, it's not over completely. There are still neighborhoods that are dead and will not recover.

But the spirit, what makes New Orleans, didn't die and it's here, in this recounting of disaster, that I see again how much New Orleans means to those who love her. The moments of finding her soul again, despite the destruction.

If you love NOLA, this is important to read. It's part of her now. ( )
2 stem amaryann21 | Apr 12, 2016 |
1-5 van 27 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
The physical and psychic dislocation wrought by Hurricane Katrina is painstakingly recollected in this brilliant collection of columns by award-winning New Orleans Times Picayune columnist Rose (who has already hand-sold 60,000 self-published copies).
toegevoegd door hipdeep | bewerkPublishers Weekly (Dec 31, 2007)
 

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Varley, CharlieFotograafSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
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This book is dedicated to Thomas Coleman, a retired longshoreman, who died in his attic at 2214 St. Roch Avenue in New Orleans' 8th ward on or about August 29, 2005. He had a can of juice and a bedspread at his side when the waters rose.

There were more than a thousand like him.
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Dear America, I suppose we should introduce ourselves: we're South Louisiana. We have arrived on your doorstep on short notice and we apologize for that, but we were never much for waiting around for invitations.
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Wikipedia in het Engels (1)

"1 Dead in Attic is a collection of stories by Times-Picayune columnist Chris Rose, recounting the first harrowing year and a half of life in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Celebrated as a local treasure and heaped with national praise, Rose provides a rollercoaster ride of observation, commentary, emotion, tragedy, and even humor--in a way that only he could find in a devastated wasteland. They are stories of the dead and the living, stories of survivors and believers, stories of hope and despair. And stories about refrigerators. 1 Dead in Attic freeze-frames New Orleans, caught between an old era and a new one, during its most desperate time, as it struggles out of the floodwaters and wills itself back to life."--Page 4 of cover.

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