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1 Dead in Attic: After Katrina

1 Dead in Attic: After KatrinaAuthor: Chris Rose
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Category: Book

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Seller: BRILANTI BOOKS
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 41 reviews
Sales Rank: 3,557

Media: Paperback
Pages: 364
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.5 x 1.1

ISBN: 1416552987
Dewey Decimal Number: 976.335064
EAN: 9781416552987
ASIN: 1416552987

Publication Date: August 21, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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  • ISBN13: 9781416552987
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
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.

Dead in Attic freeze-frames New Orleans, caught between an old era and a new, during its most desperate time, as it struggles out of the floodwaters and wills itself back to life.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 41
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5 out of 5 stars Living in hell after Katrina   February 3, 2008
Rebecca Huston (On the Banks of the Hudson)
32 out of 34 found this review helpful

There are times when I sit and wonder, Am I crazy? Am I crazy?, especially when I look at the state of modern America these days. Back in 2005 I watched with the rest of us the terrible storm that swept over New Orleans, and the knowledge that something truly awful was going to happen. With it came the knowledge that there was going to be damn little that any of us could do about it either.

People being plucked from rooftops by helicopters. Water up to the roofline. Trees, cars, and everything else -- including the dead -- floating in water that crawled with god only knew what. The real horror came a little later, when it was realized that many did not survive, abandoned in the mad rush to get to safety. That's what shook me up the most; it wasn't the looting or violence, but that we, America, had left the disabled and elderly to die in their homes.

Writer Chris Rose, a commentator with the Times-Picayune in New Orleans, has collected his columns from the newspaper into a book that takes a hard look at the Crescent City, and what life was like after Katrina left. He talks about what it's like to come home and find your house gone. Or what it's like to drive along the street and see household contents piled up on the edges. Or that nary a rat was to be seen for weeks after the hurricane. Most chilling for me was the description of bodies, or the messages scrawled on homes mentioning the number of dead that were within. And finally, The Smell that engulfed everything for weeks afterwards, a stench that crawled into everything as trash decomposed.

They say that writing can help to heal the effects of trauma. And Rose is clearly using this form of therapy as he observes not only the attempts of himself and his family, and those that chose to return to New Orleans, but also the reactions of the world beyond New Orleans. There are all of those nameless, countless volunteers that came to rescue and help, giving of the very best of themselves. There are the stories of the survivors, and the curious ways that many of them have taken to cope -- Magnet Man has rather unique perspective, and the neighborhood Cat Lady.

And in among the good, there is also the bad. A guy who dumped his refrigerator full of rotting food in one of the few clean parks that were cleared after the storm. The shooting and violence that regularly occurred. The endless blame game among the politicians. The incompetence of FEMA and the federal government to actually do something to help these people.

As I read, I found myself astonished. By the resilience of those who have gone back, and are determined to see New Orleans come back. Equally so by the callous disregard of the rest of the world to remember that people are still homeless, hungry and in need there. I found myself getting angry, and feeling shame that there wasn't much I could do besides trying to give donations to charity, and regularly sending my good wishes and saying I haven't forgotten you to my friends who have decided to stick it out in New Orleans.

Each of the essays in this book are not much more than a few pages long, originally published. Rose doesn't hold anything back; he lets his own despair, anger, and hopelessness show. But there are stories of amazing generosity and care, and that sometimes gets overlooked in among all of the other stories. And finally, there is New Orleans herself, which is facing decades of rebuilding ahead.

In the world of instant news, all too often a disaster is covered for a few days or weeks, then brushed to the back of the room as some new horror comes crawling across our television or computer screens. This book was a vivid reminder to me that more often than not, recovery isn't a measure of weeks or months, but sometimes will take years to occur. If you have the mental strength to want to know some of what is happening in the New Orleans of today, read this book.

Yes, it will bother you. You'll probably get upset while reading it. You'll probably have to set it aside now and then to catch your breath. But if you want an honest assessment of what Katrina did, this is a good start to understanding the hearts and minds of those who have chosen to stay.

Five stars.

Recommended.



5 out of 5 stars Essential for anyone's "Katrina" shelf   August 26, 2007
K. G. Schneider (Tallahassee, FL)
19 out of 20 found this review helpful

Chris Rose was a Pulitzer nominee for his post-Katrina writing. I was glad to see the Times-Picayune snag some well-deserved Pulitzers, but sad that Nicholas Kristof (however much I like his columns) edged out Rose.

In any event, this is a stand-out collection of columns--really, in most cases, very brief essays.

When I first read the book, in a small-press edition, it stayed with me for days. No matter what else I was reading or doing, I saw the people Rose writes about, sitting on door stoops, calling him "baby" in grocery stores, struggling to rebuild after the unthinkable, taping up their stinking refrigerators. In his stories about trying to raise children, battling depression, and yes, refrigerators, Rose makes it clear that the hurricane was an event, but Katrina is a condition New Orleans struggles with every day.

A year later, this book is now available in a new, expanded edition. One or two essays are a little over-sentimental, but never mind. This is an amazing book. (Read it alongside, or after, "Breach of Faith.") Rose's direct prose and grim, funny, heart-ful imagery make this book essential reading for any caring person, and a must for library collections.



5 out of 5 stars Get this book   August 12, 2007
17 out of 18 found this review helpful

Friends in the New Orleans area recommended this book. I LOVED it. Then I gave it to my husband and my sister and they loved it too. Written by a reporter from the New Orleans Times Picayune newspaper, who was there during those awful early days of the aftermath. I was there 3 months after Katrina and met locals who shared stories similar to his. The book is engrossing and sad but, believe it or not, it's actually funny in some parts. Chris Rose tells his story beautifully. This is a book people from New Orleans will give to their grandchildren to explain what it was really like after Katrina.


5 out of 5 stars Chris Rose is a terrific writer   August 30, 2007
M. Maynard (Detroit, Michigan USA)
11 out of 13 found this review helpful

I've become a regular reader of Chris Rose's column on www.nola.com and I'm glad to see his writings on Katrina have been published in book form. He has suffered along with the people that he writes about, and to read the personal stories of people in New Orleans will tear your heart out. I am glad he, and the rest of the Times-Picayune staff, have been there tell this tale.


5 out of 5 stars The Unvarnished Truth about Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans   August 30, 2007
Dayne A. Sherman (Hammond, LA United States)
7 out of 8 found this review helpful

Chris Rose has written one of the most eloquent love songs for the hard-hit and painfully depressed City of New Orleans. It's like a love song to an embittered lover, but a lover nonetheless. Rose, resident funny man of The Times-Picayune newspaper, is the chief troubadour of the Big Easy. He is the most trusted and read commentator in the city.

In his book titled 1 Dead in Attic, you will find some of Mr. Rose's best columns from the Picayune, stories detailing life in an American war zone. Rose waxes poetic with "Refrigerator Town." He writes, "In Refrigerator Town there was a Council full of Clowns...." Well said. At least one of these clowns just made a plea deal with the feds and will be heading to jail.

He takes stock in his own life with "Lurching Towards Babylon." He says, "I spend my days like everyone else, lurching from one `episode' to the next, just trying live, just trying to survive, just trying not to crack up and embarrass myself, my family and my newspaper." In the piece he goes on to tell us how he confronts a litterer on the streets of New Orleans (a city full of litter), and what's the reason? IT MATTERS! Dang it, it matters now more than ever. Everything matters in a place like this. In Louisiana after the storm, it matters. Rose is ready to kick tail over litter, to take his risks. The book is like this at every turn. Either Rose is being courageous by simply telling us the truth or he's telling us about someone else's act of courage. The title, 1 Dead in Attic, is pretty much a downer and so is the post-Katrina landscape, but there's a story beneath the story, and Rose gives it to us in little anecdotes and examples of pure human triumph.

In addition to the essays, you'll find numerous black and white photographs by Charlie Varley, the kind of pictures that illustrate the gravity of daily life in the City that Care Forgot.

For those interested in learning more about Louisiana, the book stands alongside the giants of Louisiana literature and history: All the King's Men (Robert Penn Warren), The Moviegoer (Walker Percy), The Awakening (Kate Chopin), The Earl of Louisiana (A.J. Liebling), Huey Long (T. Harry Williams), Welding with Children (Tim Gautreaux), Modern Baptists (James Wilcox), A Lesson Before Dying (Ernest Gaines), and Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 (John Barry), among others.

I highly recommend 1 Dead in Attic for its detailed and passionate glimpse of real life in New Orleans post-Katrina. One might call it the best "post-apocalypse" book on New Orleans yet.

Reviewed by Dayne Sherman,
Author of Welcome to the Fallen Paradise, a novel about Louisiana


Showing reviews 1-5 of 41
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