Review by New York Times Review
In 2010 my wife and I were living in Amsterdam in an apartment on the Spui, a bustling central square in the city. Around the winter holidays my mother-in-law flew out from New Jersey to visit. She and my wife biked around the city, making a point of visiting the Anne Frank Museum. The line to enter the museum, and tour the annex where Anne and seven others hid from the Nazis for two years, spread down the block. Later my wife said she understood why the destination remained so popular. There was something profound about knowing that this single teenage girl - smart, snide, loving and funny - had been living in that same small annex where my wife and mother-in-law had been standing; deeply moving to be reminded that a hateful regime had snuffed that life out. The next day my wife wondered about the fact that African-American slavery lacked the same, singular being, a young person who could have communicated the horrors - and also the tedium, the joys - of that lived experience. Of course there were escaped slaves who wrote books about their ordeals: Frederick Douglass, Harriet Ann Jacobs, Olaudah Equiano, to name just a few heavy hitters. But there's something about the unvarnished slice of teenage Anne's life - the day-to-day highs and lows - that helps her enter the hearts of so many. To read about two years in the life of a teenage black girl who was enslaved - Sally Hernings, for example - and then visit the windowless room where Thomas Jefferson stored her, could be deeply moving in much the same way. But of course slave owners denied Africans the right to read or write , creating laws that made it impossible to set down proof of one's inner life. When slaves died they left behind physical evidence, but most would never be able to speak for themselves. One way to ensure you're never prosecuted for a crime is to make it impossible for your victims to testify. I had been thinking about this quite a bit lately - about the depths to which civilizations sink - when I read Kathryn Miles's "Quakeland" and Henry Fountain's "The Great Quake." I admit to being in a sour mood. Not about the books, but about humanity. This is a strange mind-set to have when reading about natural disasters. If you've been thinking that humanity is hardly worth the trouble to keep around then maybe a cataclysm, or the fear of cataclysms to come, seems like a relief. Let's sweep humanity off the board and let the rest of the natural world have another go. They could hardly do worse than us. On Aug. 17,1959, a magnitude 7.5 earthquake popped off right near Yellowstone National Park. It caused a great deal of damage, including the nation's biggest recorded rock slide. Over 73 million metric tons of debris came down a canyon wall. Nineteen people were lost underneath. On March 27,1964, "a great earthquake with a Richter magnitude of 8.4 to 8.6 crippled south-central Alaska," as the Geological Survey put it in a subsequent report. "It released twice as much energy as the 1906 earthquake that wracked San Francisco." In the small Alaska town of Chenega a tidal wave, caused by that quake, swept a third of the villagers right out to sea. Both Fountain and Miles are journalists (Fountain has worked at The New York Times for two decades), and their books are chock-full of these kinds of tales, describing the human scale of such disasters. As the death tolls mounted, my misanthropy buckled. It's one thing to dismiss human beings in the abstract, another to gloss over real loss. Still the danger is that such accounting can numb a reader, become merely a litany of grim tales about the ways humans can die. I've already got "Game of Thrones" for that. After a while I wanted a change of scale, something beyond the human struggle, no matter how heartbreaking. Earthquakes aren't happening to us alone after all; they're happening to the planet itself. "The Appalachian Mountains, the oldest on the planet, are actually scabs from a head-on collision of two plates," Miles writes in "Quakeland." "They are composed largely of rock that once made up the seafloor - and they were once taller than the Himalayas." A passage like this inspires awe, but also treats the theory of continental drift as a commonplace, well past argument. It wasn't always so, as Fountain reminds us in "The Great Quake": "In the 19th century," he writes, "one of the prevailing ideas of earth science was that the planet was cooling. In this view, the Earth had formed as a hot ball and had been losing heat ever since." Accordingly, an Austrian named Eduard Suess theorized that mountains were formed through a process of contraction. "The cooling Earth, he said, was like a drying apple. As the flesh of the apple shrank, the skin became wrinkled." Thus mountains. This theory held strong until a German named Alfred Wegener proposed a "wild idea: that the Earth's landmasses were not fixed but instead moved through the oceanic crust. His concept came to be known as the theory of continental drift." While Wegener wrote treatises on the subject the "stabilists" on the other side held sway in the scientific community until the 1940s. but as technology, and corroborating evidence, supported Wegener's theory, our understanding of the planet became more surprising and wondrous. "It had been known since ships began laying telegraph cables between North America and Europe," Fountain writes, "that there was a ridge of undersea mountains in the mid-Atlantic. Now... detailed maps revealed that the ridge was actually two parallel ridges, with a valley between. What's more, this double ridge extended from north to south for thousands of miles, like a giant surgical scar." "The Great Quake" is rich with such revelations; and I felt grateful, even giddy, as I read them. Fountain's book is like a gift box: Open the lid to peek at the treasures of the Earth. I could geek out on such details for a month and never miss mentions of humanity. "Quakeland" is less interested in these deep geological details, but Miles did remind me about what's best in humanity, reminded me of our value. She peppers her book with quick bits of information about scientists and the work they do in service of understanding our planet and its earthquakes. Whether it's Zhang Heng, the Chinese mathematician who in A.D. 132 developed the first seismograph or the geophysicists Heather Savage and Charles Merguerian, who study the faults below New York City, it's clear that Miles loves scientists. Her book becomes, in part, a love letter to the tedium and wizardry that is scientific discovery. For instance, "spare a thought for the poor geologist Stephen Taber, who assessed the 1920 Los Angeles earthquake by counting broken bottles in pharmacies around that city." Again and again Miles takes pains to point out just how much legwork and discipline such research demands. And the scientists' discoveries don't serve themselves alone, but all of us. The current political and historical moment makes her attention to such details feel like a fullthroated, and welcome, defense of the scientific method. This focus on scientists and their labor reignited my affection for humanity. Granted that's an odd reaction after reading two books about the catastrophic danger of earthquakes - but neither book wallows in sensationalism or alarmism. Besides, when lingering on the fates of children like Sally Hernings or Anne Frank and the countless millions like them across time, it's a gift to be reminded of humanity at its most impressive. With a smile and a wink I closed these books thinking, Thank God for scientists. ? In 1964, a tided wave caused by an earthquake swept away a third of the villagers in one Alaska town. VICTOR LAVALLE is the author, most recently, of the novel "The Changeling."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [December 24, 2018]
Review by Booklist Review
Frightful articles about earthquakes, including The Earthquake That Will Devastate the Pacific in the New Yorker, have recently appeared, but award-winning science writer Miles (Superstorm, 2014) is not interested in fear tactics. In this engrossing, timely, thoroughly researched account, she crisscrosses America, meeting with dozens of scientists and immersing herself in the nation's turbulent geologic history. She provides vital background information and personal stories about Yellowstone, Salt Lake City, New York, and Memphis while peering into reams of research on dam stability, airport design, the Mississippi River, and so much more. (One interesting fact: FedEx's main terminal is on the New Madrid Fault Line.) Miles also brings readers up to speed on the earthquakes we are causing by fracking and the political forces engaged in denying that problem. (Another interesting fact: prior to 2014, there were 24 earthquakes annually in the Midwest; that year, there were 688.) Smart, compelling, and fearless in its embrace of science, Quakeland is full of fascinating people imparting big truths. We ignore their knowledge at our own peril.--Mondor, Colleen Copyright 2017 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Science journalist Miles (Superstorm) details a potential new source of anxiety for Americans: seismicity. She cites the unpredictable nature of earthquakes and the fact that there are over 2,100 known faults on the U.S. geological map. Sketching grim scenarios of potential disaster, Miles suggests that the American infrastructure is wholly unprepared to withstand the next rupture. She begins with the Hebgen Lake, Mont., quake of 1959, which caused $11 million in damages ($70 million today), to illustrate the suddenness of tremors and their devastating ripple effects. Miles then takes readers on a cross-country tour of seismic hot spots. She meets with colorful engineers and geologists to peer below the Earth's surface and gauge the pressure being imposed on it internally as well as externally by human constructions such as the Hoover Dam, Mississippi River levees, and the Steinway Tunnel (which connects Manhattan and Queens). Miles also confronts hydraulic fracturing in Oklahoma, where increasingly powerful earthquakes have spread over a larger territory, making it the most seismically active of the Lower 48 states. Yet despite myriad technological advances, predicting the next earthquake remains nearly impossible. Mixing geological primer with apocalyptic warning, Miles makes clear "how fragile-and volatile-the ground beneath our feet really is." Agent: Wendy Strothman, Strothman Agency. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
The only people in America who need to worry about earthquakes are those living in California, right? Wrong, says journalist Miles (fine arts, Chatham Univ., Pittsburgh). Starting the book with a description of the layers of the earth and a startling true story of the terrific damage an earthquake can cause in a matter of minutes, Miles will have listeners' attention as she proves that there are earthquakes everywhere in America. From Salt Lake City to Memphis (and a visit to the biggest FedEx hub) to Yellowstone National Park, the San Andreas Fault, Hoover Dam, and even New York City, interviews with expert seismologists and geologists warn about the dangers waiting under the earth. A larger section examines human-induced earthquakes caused by mining and hydrofracking and the incredible damage done to water tables and the stability of surrounding lands. Specifics, such as how soil can liquefy during an earthquake and intraplate faults, provide listeners with a solid foundation of knowledge. Narrator Bernadette Dunne does a fine job of hitting Miles's sarcastic notes, but the gravelly tone of her voice may grind on some ears. VERDICT An eye-opening examination of the true dangers that could and will occur across the land. Perfect for fans of the science and wit of Mary Roach and geology and seismology. ["A relevant topic that any reader will find compelling": LJ 9/15/17 review of the Dutton hc.]-Jason L. Steagall, Gateway Technical Coll. Lib., Elkhorn, WI © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A wide-ranging account of earthquakes, the least understood of natural disasters, with vivid stories of the havoc they create and a warning about what will someday happen in the United States.Journalist Miles (Superstorm: Nine Days Inside Hurricane Sandy, 2014), a writer-in-residence at Green Mountain College, took an extended road trip across the country to report on the myriad risks of seismic disasters. Along the way, she picked the brains of cooperative engineers and scientists and chatted with miners and emergency managers, people with whom she established immediate rapport. A daring investigator, she descended into deep mines, gained entry to nuclear power plants (some of which are built on fault lines), and ventured into the interiors of high dams, observing, asking questions, and conjuring some scary conclusionse.g., earthquakes happen, our infrastructure is in a sorry state, and many localities have no seismic codes to regulate construction. Miles lightens this grim picture with her conversational writing style. She shares her thoughts, emotions, and experiences, even the most commonplace ones, effectively taking readers along on her cross-country wanderings. In the Midwest, where fracking is common and quakes are frequent, her conversations with people waiting for the big one while living regularly with toppled chimneys and broken china are spot-on. While she describes past earthquakes in other countries, the author focuses mostly on the prospects of a major quake in this country and what can be done to prepare for it. After looking at struggles to develop technology that can predict earthquakes, Miles reports on the success of early warning systems, which can make a major difference in survival rates, and she sets forth a scenario in which a few seconds of warning and some preparedness measures can ameliorate the devastation of a major quake. Occasionally long-winded but readable and engagingnot to mention eye-opening, as the author delivers a firm warning to policymakers as well as individual citizens. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.