Danger Files: Real-Life Disasters

Anna Crowley Redding

Book - 2025

Have you every wanted to delve deeper into some of the most dramatic disasters in history? Do you want to learn about narrow escapes and read eyewitness accounts from the viewpoint of those who were lucky enough to survive? In Danger Files, you'll investigate some of the world's biggest catastrophes while playing disaster detective. Take on the sinking of the Titanic, the crash of the Hindenburg, the flu pandemic of 1918, the Boston molasses flood, and the fire that decimated the city of Chicago. With access to case files full of critical facts and clues, get ready to determine for yourself what happened and why!

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
History
Creative nonfiction
Essais fictionnels
Published
Somerville, Massachusetts Candlewick Press 2025.
Language
Undetermined
Main Author
Anna Crowley Redding (-)
Other Authors
Robbie Cathro (illustrator)
Item Description
"What would you do?"
Physical Description
198 pages illustrations 21 cm
ISBN
9781536213416
9781536236736
  • Includes bibliography and index.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Fact-file inserts and eyewitness accounts help readers understand the causes, courses, and aftermaths of five historical calamities. Confirmed disaster fans will likely already be familiar with the examples Crowley Redding has chosen, but they'll be pleased with her selection. The disasters vary widely in type and scope--the flu epidemic of 1918 killed roughly 50 million people worldwide, whereas 21 people died in Boston's Great Molasses Flood of 1919--and for each catastrophe, the author includes a broad assortment of background facts and accounts of actual young survivors, such as Werner Franz, a cabin boy aboard the Hindenburg. Along with systematically analyzing causes and long-term effects, Crowley Redding highlights the impact of anti-immigrant prejudice in both the Great Chicago Fire (no, Mrs. O'Leary's cow wasn't the culprit, contrary to a news story that stoked anti-Irish, anti-Catholic sentiments) and the sticky flood in Boston's North End. She also profiles rescuer Anna Elizabeth Hudlun, the "Fire Angel" of Chicago, as well as other Black people involved in the catastrophes. Though the occasional demonstrations of such topics as freezing chemistry and static electricity are woefully perfunctory, the blow-by-blow narratives make for absorbing reading, and the substantial bibliography at the end should please even the most demanding young documentarians. Final art not seen. Catastrophically engrossing. (source notes, index) (Nonfiction. 10-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.