Monday, June 17, 2013

Out of the Blue - 1968 Tracy, MN F-5 Tornado by Scott Thoma




Scott Thoma's book Out of the Blue provides eye witness accounts of an F5 tornado that hit Tracy, Minnesota during the summer of 1968.    This is a review by Audrey Kletscher Helbling  in MinnPost. 

It is a brutally honest story about the survival, death and destruction caused by one of two F-5 tornadoes in Minnesota history.  The story is relevant to me as I moved into southwest Minnesota in the fall of 1967 and visited the site after the tornado with my dad in the summer of 1968.  I remember seeing the destroyed elementary school.  

He places three people, a birth mom, a soon to be adopted baby and the adoptive mother at the center of the story.  We learn about the move to Tracy Minnesota and the deployment of the husband to Vietnam and the tragedy that strikes on the day of the tornado.

The town's emergency response to the tornado is covered in great detail and can serve as a guide to other emergency management personnel in preparing for a natural disaster.  The nearby communities worked rapidly together to provide additional resources for security, hospital workers, electrical generators, shelter and food. 

Railroad operators also acted to warn residents as the train was coming into town just before the tornado hit the town.  They blew the train whistle and ran the train back and forth on the tracks to get the residents' attention. 

The book also provides information about the best place to be in a tornado.  It is not the SW corner of the  basement.  It is in an protected interior room on the lowest level of the house.  Cover yourself with blankets to protect yourself from flying debris. 

The book provides a clear eyed look at how people respond to an emergency and the results of their decisions. 


Thirty minute radio interview of Scott Thoma on KMHL radio

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Double Cross by Ben MacIntyre



 
 
I thoroughly enjoyed Ben MacIntyre's book Double Cross about the British effort to mislead the Germans about the location of the D-Day landing.  The British acquired a misfit band of people to mislead the Germans about the allies. 
 
The book covers the largely unsuccessful but enthusiastically pursued carrier pigeon war.  I was struck by the bravery, the pettiness and the creativity of the people in the double cross project.  Recruited British spies were created out of thin air and used to gather fictitious reports about people that were not there.
 
There was even an elaborately planned rouse to convince the Germans that General Montgomery was in Africa when he was in fact in England.  
 

 
 
Richard and Judy talk to Ben MacIntyre about Double Cross


The book, Double Cross: The True Story of the D-Day Spies is available from Amazon.com.