Further Reading
E.L. Doctorow. Ragtime An extraordinary tapestry, Ragtime captures the spirit of America in the era between the turn of the century and the First World War, in a magical blend of fantasy and historical fact, real and imaginary characters. [Adult Fiction] |
|
Priya Parmar. Vanessa and Her Sister In 1905, Virginia and Vanessa Stephens and their brothers Thoby and Adrian moved to unfashionable, bohemian Bloomsbury. There they would befriend a group soon to become famous, breaking the old rules and blazing their own new paths.[Adult Fiction] |
|
Pamela Schoenewaldt. Swimming in the Moon Italy, 1905. Fourteen-year-old Lucia and her young mother, Teresa, are servants in a magnificent villa, where Teresa soothes their unhappy mistress with song. But volatile tempers force them to flee, exchanging their warm, gilded cage for the cold winds off Lake Erie and Cleveland's restless immigrant quarters. [Adult Fiction] |
|
Sean Stewart. Galveston The return of magic to the world at the dawn of the 21st century splits the city of Galveston into two parallel worlds--a "normal" city of survivors and a perpetual Carnival town of magic-touched creatures. [Adult Fiction] |
|
Richard Cunningham. Maude Brown's Baby Orphaned by the hurricane that wrecked Galveston, Texas, in September 1900, aspiring photojournalist Donald Brown has all but abandoned hope of learning who his parents might have been, until he discovers clues to his origins in the photo of himself as an infant.. [Adult Fiction] |
|
Joanna Scott. De Potter's Grand Tour In 1905, a tourist agent and amateur antiques collector named Armand de Potter mysteriously disappeared off the coast of Greece. His body is never recovered and his wife is left to manage his affairs on her own. But as she starts to piece together his life, she realizes that everything was not as he had said. [Adult Fiction] |
|
N.E. Brown and S.L. Jenkins. Galveston: 1900. Indignities: the Arrival After arriving in Galveston, Texas from England, at the turn of the century, a young courageous fifteen year-old girl, Catherine Eastman must face a new life in an orphanage after her mother is murdered by a drifter shortly after they arrive. [Adult Fiction] |
|
Mary Gardner. Boat People Vietnamese immigrants struggle with the burdens of faraway loved ones, unfamiliar customs and the scars of their flight from home in this evocative novel set in Galveston. [Adult Fiction] |
|
Carolyn Osborn. Uncertain Ground Set in 1953, this novel follows 21-year-old Celia Henderson during a month of uncertainty in her life. Visiting Galveston, Texas, a barrier island with its own history of instability and survival, Celia faces a series of conflicts that will affect the course of her life. [Adult Fiction] |
|
Elizabeth Black. The Drowning House Returning to the insular Galveston home town of her youth in the wake of a family tragedy, photographer Clare Porterfield is drawn into a century-old mystery involving a woman who drowned during the Hurricane of 1900. [Adult Fiction] |
Al Roker. Storm of the Century Presents an account of the legendary hurricane to assess its destruction of Galveston, role in thousands of deaths, and influence on American history and culture. [Adult Nonfiction] |
|
Erik Larson. Isaac's Storm September 8, 1900, began innocently in the seaside town of Galveston, Texas. Even Isaac Cline, resident meteorologist for the U.S. Weather Bureau failed to grasp the true meaning of the strange deep-sea swells and peculiar winds that greeted the city that morning. [Adult Nonfiction] |
|
John Edward Weems. A Weekend in September The hurricane that swept Galveston Island early in September, 1900, occupies a unique place in the reckoning of events of the Texas Gulf coast. More than a century after its passing, the storm remains the standard against which the ferocity and destructiveness of all others are measured. [Adult Nonfiction] |
|
Casey Edward Greene and Shelly Henley Kelly. Through a Night of Horrors: Voices from the 1900 Galveston Storm Covers the life and work of 12 poets who wrote during World War I, seven of whom did not survive the war. [Adult Nonfiction] |
|
Jackie Garvin. Biscuits: Sweet and Savory Southern Recipes for the All-American Kitchen From the kitchens of our grandmothers to present-day biscuit-only shops, this sweet and savory food has come a long way in American culture. [Adult Nonfiction] |
Sherry Garland. The Silent Storm Written soon after the end of the war, this last of the Anne of Green Gables books shows what life was like for women on the home front in Canada. [Young Adult Fiction] |
|
Candice Ransom. Illustrated by Paul Tong. The Night of the Hurricane's Fury In 1900, while visiting his aunt in Galveston, Texas, ten-year-old Robert Pettibone is washed into swirling floodwaters when a hurricane takes the town by surprise. [Juvenile Fiction] |
|
Marian Hale. Dark Water Rising While salvaging and rebuilding in the aftermath of the Galveston flood of 1900, sixteen-year-old Seth proves himself in a way that his previous efforts never could, but he still must face his father man-to-man. [Young Adult Fiction] |
|
Julie T. Lamana. Upside Down in the Middle of Nowhere At the end of August 2005, ten-year-old Armani is looking forward to her birthday party in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans, where she and her extended family live, but Hurricane Katrina is on the way, bringing destruction and tragedy in its wake. [Juvenile Fiction] |
|
Stephanie Spinner. Illustrated by David Groff. Who Was Clara Barton? Profiles the life and accomplishments of Clara Barton, a teacher who organized efforts to bring nursing care to wounded soldiers during the Civil War and who went on to become the founder of the American Red Cross. [Juvenile Nonfiction] |
|
Lisa Waller Rogers. The Great Storm: the Hurricane Diary of J.T. King, Galveston, Texas, 1900 A teenage boy keeps a diary of events during the devastating hurricane which struck Galveston, Texas, in 1900, and of the rescue operations that followed. [Juvenile Fiction] |
|
Kristine Brennan. The Galveston Hurricane An account of the tragic Galveston hurricane of 1900 that claimed over six thousand lives. [Juvenile Nonfiction] |