Sunday, 2 January 2011

1 Dead in Attic




Chris Rose, the Author of 1 Dead in Attic, is a columnist for the Times-Picayune in New Orleans. In his book of mostly articles based on Hurricane Katrina, he writes of life after. Never once in my life would I expect to find such humble writings besides biblical. Based on his own observation, in his hometown of New Orleans, he writes a story that should be told to everyone…he writes history. History in the making, yes! But also that history, becomes our story, his story.

I was delighted and saddened by the very first pages of 1 Dead in Attic. Almost like a whisper and then a scream, the pages captured me. Hundreds of people lost their lives, but it was a house that read “1 Dead in Attic”, that inspired a great book. A lot can be learned from such an experience and writing.

In one of his articles he wrote, he explains about life and the things not often cherished. For instance: “Amid the devastation, you have to look for hope. Forward progress of any kind. Even the smallest of incidents of routine and normalcy become reassuring. Example, I was driving down Prytania, and at the corner of Felicity , the light turned red. Out of no where, in total desolation, there was a working stop –light. And the funny thing is, I stopped. I waited for it to turn green, and then I drove slowly on my way, even though there were no other cars anywhere and the likelihood of getting a ticket for running the only working traffic light in town seems very unlikely. Considering. Also on Prytania, there was a gardener watering the plants on Nicolas’ Cage front porch. I guess that’s a good sign, life goes on in small ways”.

Among the big name reporters and news stations huddled up in New Orleans, there stood a sound and reassuring voice. A voice the only one can have after seeing his home destroyed, Chris Rose. While all the other reporters honed in on devastation, he simply writes…”Today in New Orleans, a traffic light worked. Someone watered their flowers. It’s a start.”


I often thought that devastation was a bad story parents told children about. I did, however, see it first hand as a 10 year old, living in Florida. Somewhere, somehow, I relate to the people of hurricane Katrina. And in a lot of ways I absorb their culture and traditions. And no, I have yet to suck the juices from the head of a crawfish. That just seems gross!

3 comments:

Saffron said...

Thank you for the review Kimmie. Yes how poignant a simple thing such as a working traffic light can be under those circumstances.

Soulstar said...

Thank you, Kimmie. If you'll bring this one with you Saturday, I'll swap you "Same Kind Of Different As Me" for it. :)

Nicky said...

Thanks for taking the time out to write this review, Kimmie. This is really a sad story. made all the more worse, by the incredibly slow response time.

The human spirit still endures, though.