Storm

George R. Stewart, 1895-1980

Book - 2021

"A violent storm sweeps through California, taking on a life of her own. Making her way from the Pacific Coast, she gains momentum as she approaches the Sierra and transforms into a blizzard of great strength, covering mountain ranges and roads with twenty feet of snow. Originally published in 1941, Storm is a rare combination of fiction and science by a master storyteller, drawing upon a deep knowledge of geography, meteorology, and human nature"--

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Subjects
Genres
Nature stories
Suspense fiction
Science fiction
Published
New York : New York Review Books 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
George R. Stewart, 1895-1980 (author)
Physical Description
279 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781681375182
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A massive winter storm brings destruction, peril, and death to drought-plagued California. The Chief Meteorologist at the U.S. Weather Bureau in San Francisco feels a tug of disappointment as the local weather remains, day after day, fair and unchanged. Meanwhile, the Junior Meteorologist, preparing a map of weather data over the Pacific Ocean, notices the birth of a charming new baby storm in miniature, which he secretly christens Maria. The storm moves eastward, growing in size and, within a few days, bringing torrential rain and snowfall. Managers, and maintenance workers responsible for major roads, long-distance telephone lines, railroads, airports, and Sacramento's flood gates are mobilized. A coyote, an owl, and a huge boar named Blue Boy are caught in the storm along with ordinary citizens. In the notorious Donner Pass, a telephone line goes down. At Windy Point, a crucial highway is blocked. Motorists Max and Jen go missing. Panicked farmers telephone the flood gates' manager, begging him not to inundate their fields as the rivers rise. A pilot flies a plane full of passengers into the storm. Within her life span of just 11 days, Maria puts all of them in jeopardy. Some survive; others don't. A new introduction by Nathaniel Rich provides historical context for Stewart's reissued classic, first published in 1941. Pure excitement for eco-fiction fans. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.