Showing posts with label san francisco earthquake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label san francisco earthquake. Show all posts

Earthquake Exodus, 1906 Review

Earthquake Exodus, 1906
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This is no dry recitation served up by Richard Schwartz. By his thorough research of first-hand local sources, he walks us right up to the 1906 San Francisco quake survivors, introduces us like they are his best friends, and then lets them tell us their stories. The result is an engaging account of these century old San Francisco area events, filled with poignant photos and news clips. A history, well done!

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Earthquake Exodus, 1906, Berkeley Responds to the San Francisco Refugees, by Richard Schwartz is a book that tells the story of the ten-week relief effort in the East Bay after the 1906 Earthquake and fire. Earthquake Exodus, 1906, celebrates a largely unknown chapter from the aftermath of the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906. Containing many breathtaking photos and illustrations never before published or unseen in nearly 100 years, this new visual history is breathtaking. Berkeley Voice columnist Martin Snapp writes, "even more compelling than the photos are the hundreds of stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things." In the story of the relief effort, instigated within hours of the earthquake, the ordinary and extraordinary people of Berkeley began to organize a committee, knowing that terrified masses of stricken refugees would be pouring into their town within hours. As author Schwartz says, "They didn't wait for government. They didn't wait for money. They didn't wait for instructions." DID YOU KNOW • that many people fled to the Berkeley hills the first night of the quake and a number of women died there giving birth? • that Asian refugees were segregated in their own camps and sections of town and that even the embassy of China inspected their plight and did not complain?• smallpox erupted in Berkeley during the relief effort?• industrial West Berkeley, filled with a working class immigrant population, actually caught fire after the earthquake?"Schwartz explains how Berkeleyans generously responded by setting up temporary camps, dispensing food, listing jobs, and even taking in the homeless. He details the measures taken to ensure public order and health as city and university officials struggled to deal with thousands of disoriented, impoverished, and sometimes dangerous strangers, many separated from their loved ones— everyday details long forgotten but worth study by those who wish to better prepare for the next great shake." Dr. Gray Brechin, author of Imperial San Francisco: Urban Power, Earthly Ruin. (Dr. Brechin wrote the forward to Schwartz's book).

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Tunes from a Tuscan Guitar: The Life and Times of an Italian Immigrant Review

Tunes from a Tuscan Guitar: The Life and Times of an Italian Immigrant
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I had the good fortune to meet the author when he MC'd the 60th reunion of his high school class last year (no, I am not in that class, I was there to represent the Alumni Association) and roared along with his classmates at the tale of how he ended up at cross-town Washington High rather than his neighborhood Galileo.
Well, after reading this wonderful account of his grandfather's life, I know the man is a born storyteller! Despite his in-person charm, I wasn't expecting much out of this book, and I was so wrong -- I couldn't put this easy read down, and my mind instinctively pictured film scenes. Somebody buy the movie rights for this hidden gem!
I'll now have a new appreciation for those Eucalyptus trees in Burlingame.

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Nora (Sunfire, No 26) Review

Nora (Sunfire, No 26)
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All the Sunfire books have history, adventure, and romance. But NORA also has survival in it. Nora is an Irish girl living in San Francisco in 1906. One morning their is a terrible earthquake. Is her family still alive? And the two young men she loves? Nora must survive the quake and aftershocks, and comes out of the quake stronger then before.

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Lizzie Newton and the San Francisco Earthquake (History Speaks: Picture Books Plus Reader's Theater (Quality)) Review

Lizzie Newton and the San Francisco Earthquake (History Speaks: Picture Books Plus Reader's Theater (Quality))
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Ten-year-old Lizzie Norton awoke with a start and sat up in bed. She had been dreaming that she was on a train that was lurching up and down on its tracks, yet all the while the shaking was real. Her eyes widened in the darkness of the morning. She ran to her Grammy's room only to find her injured and covered with plaster. It was not safe inside so they hurriedly put on some clothes and went into the streets of San Francisco where a horrible scene of destruction awaited them. Many of the buildings "lay crumbled in heaps," while flames leapt from the rooftops of others. People were frantically trying to leave the city.
Lizzie was afraid and didn't know quite what to do, but when "an ambulance wagon came clattering down the street," she hailed it. As Grammy boarded the ambulance, she told Lizzie to go home. She soon was on foot headed for home. The aftershocks were frightening and startling "cracks and holes were still opening near Lizzie's feet." She spotted firemen digging through piles of bricks. She could hear the cries of people beneath the rubble as the men struggled to save them. The fires were rampant, communication was nonexistent, and the water pipes had burst. They encouraged Lizzie to head for home, but when she arrived, her house too had been partially destroyed. She had to keep moving on to St. Francis in Union Square. Would she find her parents when she got there? Would she even survive the trek?
This is a stunningly realistic, fictionalized portrait of Lizzie, a young girl who survived the San Francisco Earthquake. The storyline is exciting and even the most reluctant reader will strive to reach the end of the book to find out what happened to young Lizzie. The full color, full page artwork captures the essence of the horrifying event and subtly conveys a lot of information the text does not discuss. For example, in a street scene we see cracks in the earth, people clustered in groups, while others have gathered up some of their belongings and are escaping on foot or in a horse drawn wagon. This edition introduces the student to Reader's Theater. It gives full instructions on how a performance goes, what to do before, and after the production. The eight-page script can be reproduced for the six performers. A link to the sound effects is given. Undoubtedly, this amazing book would be a unique, fun, highly educational way to introduce your classroom to Reader's Theater!

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Three Fearful Days: San Francisco Memoirs of the 1906 Earthquake & Fire Review

Three Fearful Days: San Francisco Memoirs of the 1906 Earthquake and Fire
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I am a former Bay Area resident, who fell in love with the city's history while attending college in the Bay Area, and try to read everything I can about the great city. I have read several of Malcolm Barker's books, including Bummer and Lazarus. What Barker does is collect letters from people who actually lived in the city, in this case, Three Fearful Days, letters from people who survived the great earthquake and disaster. I actually read this, I believe, several years ago and just last spring started posting some reviews: this was an incredible collection of stories. They are all ordinary citizens thrust into the most terrifying situation any human could face: the complete and total annihilation of their beloved city. This should be mandatory reading for anyone who loves American history, the history of the West, and California/San Francisco history in particular. It is so much better than most of the recent histories of the disaster, because these are first hand accounts, without projections and hyperboles. I think anyone would be drawn in the minute they start reading it. A truly great book, as are all of Barker's books.

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The 1906 earthquake shook San Francisco for sixty seconds and ignited fires that raged for three days, killing more than 3,000 people and destroying 500 city blocks. Dozens of first-hand accounts by people who endured the catastrophe. Stories of watching the quake approach and rip open the streets. Fighting the fire from inside the mint. Being trapped in the basement as City Hall collapsed.

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Quake: Disaster in San Francisco, 1906 Review

Quake: Disaster in San Francisco, 1906
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I'm in 6th grade and really liked this book. The main character, Jacob Kaufman, was about my age. I couldn't put the book down - even after Mom said lights out! The author made me feel like I was back in time during the earthquake. I really recommend this book - especially for boys. Absolutely NO romantic stuff.

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San Francisco Earthquake,1906 Review

San Francisco Earthquake,1906
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This is one of my all time favorite books. I have read it over and over again and there is nothing I don't like about it. Sierra and Joseph are, in my opinion, perfect for each other and I was so happy when they fell in love. The ending was very satisfying, as was the whole book. Very shattering, a perfect historical romance.

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Panic in the streets!It is the glittering center of the new West, brash young San Francisco, dominated by the luxurious Palace Hotel, where tycoons mingle with famous artists, politicians, and the young American aristocracy. Where 18-year-old housekeeper Sierra O'Nielle, still smarting from a flirtatious gentleman's snub, realizes it is time to face reality and remember her place -- until she sees Joseph Harlan, the handsome son of a wealthy cattle rancher. The sizzling electricity that flows between them is impossible to ignore.... Joseph has come to find a suitable bride. His father will do anything to keep him from a maid. Until the fateful April night Sierra is thrown into Joseph's arms as the earthquake of the century devastates the city. Suddenly they are bound together, racing through the cobbled streets seeking shelter from raining bricks, panicked crowds, and the wall of flame that threatens to devour all that is left....

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