The enormity of Texas's many major disasters are an appropriate match
for the state's large size. This is an area of the country where
tornadoes are a frequent threat, but in addition to the many violent
twisters, residents have experienced fires, floods, drought, blizzards,
shipwrecks, and other devastating events, including a yellow fever
epidemic in 1867, which earned that year the grim moniker The Year of
Death. Twenty dramatic true stories are retold in this well-researched
collection, including: >The deadly quarter-mile-wide tornado that
roared through the town of Goliad in 1902, killing 114 people, injuring
230, and demolishing 150 structures. >A 1937 natural gas explosion at a
school in New London, which blew the whole building into the air and
killed 298 students and teachers. >A 15-foot wall of water that in 1965
swept down the canyon in the West Texas railroad town of Sanderson,
killing whole families but uniting the racially divided town in rescue
efforts. >The 1947 explosion of the SS Grandcamp, a French vessel
docked in Texas City and laden with ammonium nitrate, which had caught
fire and later ignited another ship carrying the same cargo. The two
blasts killed 576 people, injured thousands more, and jarred residents
of Houston 40 miles to the north.