Labor Day 1935: The Last Train to the Keys: 4 (The Storm Council) - Softcover

Book 4 of 4: The Storm Council

Pudlock, Robert

 
9798994373682: Labor Day 1935: The Last Train to the Keys: 4 (The Storm Council)

This specific ISBN edition is currently not available.

Synopsis

The rescue train left Miami four hours late. The storm arrived exactly on time.

On the morning of Labor Day, September 2, 1935, the United States Weather Bureau issued a hurricane advisory for the Florida Keys. The advisory described a dangerous storm. What it could not describe — because the instruments to measure it did not yet exist — was that the system that had been a moderate tropical storm forty-eight hours earlier was now the most intense hurricane ever to approach American soil, its central pressure still falling toward 892 millibars, its eye wall contracting to a diameter of ten miles, its maximum sustained winds approaching 160 knots.

In the FERA relief camps on the Upper Keys, seven hundred World War I veterans waited. They had been assigned to the Matecumbe Keys by federal bureaucrats in Washington and Jacksonville, housed in wood-frame structures on a coral island no more than a quarter-mile wide and five feet above normal tide. They had an evacuation plan. The plan required a train. The train was delayed by four hours.

Labor Day 1935: The Last Train to the Keys is the fourth volume in the Storm Council series — a literary fiction sequence in which a timeless, analytical entity maintains an archive of major American hurricanes and the human decisions that determined how catastrophically each storm's potential was realized. The Council does not grieve. It measures. And what it measures in the Labor Day corridor — 892 millibars of pressure delivered through a five-mile radius of maximum wind against a geography twelve miles long and a quarter-mile wide — produces a convergence coefficient the archive has never required before.

The storm destroyed the Overseas Railroad, Flagler's engineering marvel and the only evacuation route on the island chain. Ernest Hemingway arrived in the aftermath and published a question no official inquiry would satisfactorily answer: Who murdered the vets? The inquiry produced no convictions. The railroad was never rebuilt.

In the tradition of Erik Larson's Isaac's Storm and Sebastian Junger's The Perfect Storm, the Storm Council series transforms historical disaster into literary meditation — the accumulation of decisions, the geometry of vulnerability, and the particular patience of a storm that arrives exactly where human failure has prepared for it.

The Storm Council Series:

  • Galveston (Volume One)
  • Miami (Volume Two)
  • Okeechobee (Volume Three)
  • Labor Day 1935: The Last Train to the Keys (Volume Four)

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.