My Lists
Featured Lists
REVIEWS
School Library Journal
Starred Review on August 1, 2015 | Middle To High Schoool
Gr 7 Up—A murky watercolor storm spreads across pages, darkening and becoming more ominous as it builds in Brown's deeply affecting look at Hurricane Katrina. Dynamic sketches capture shocking scenes, such as residents fleeing down claustrophobic highways as the 400-mile-wide storm looms in a nearly completely dark spread. Brown depicts broken levees, flooded homes, and inhabitants scrabbling to not drown in their attics. A stunningly powerful spread shows water everywhere and two lone people trapped on a roof. The images demonstra...Log In or Sign Up to Read More
Horn Book Magazine
Reviewed on August 1, 2015
To date, the majority of children’s and young adult books about Hurricane Katrina are microcosmic stories or accounts of a single person or family. Here, in powerful comic-book format, Brown delivers the full force of the storm and its impact on the city as a whole. Beginning with Katrina’s inception as just a breeze in Africa, he traces its path across the Atlantic and into the Gulf of Mexico. Evacuation procedures in New Orleans, both successful (eighty percent of the residents left) and unsuccessful (promised buses for the poor never arrived), are outlined in chilling...Log In or Sign Up to Read More
Horn Book Guide
Reviewed on January 1, 2015
A powerful comic-book format delivers the full force of Hurricane Katrina and its impact on New Orleans. When the storm hits, Br...Log In or Sign Up to Read More