
Kelly M. (
boxerx2) wrote on 4/12/2007...
9 member(s) found this review helpful.
I have family that live in South Dakota in the area that hit hard by this blizzard. He mentions Spirit Lake and these boys watching the storm roll over it before it hit them. That is the area where my family homesteaded and still live today, about 12 miles from DeSmet and Laura Ingles.
Even though I grew up 100 yrs after that storm, I knew about it.
I don't think you can find a cemetery in that area of South Dakota that does not have at least one marker that reads Jan 12 1888.
My Mother refused to read this book as felt it would be to painful to hear the stories over again. As she grew up there and knows how hard a Dakota winter can be.
Laskin did a wonderful job of taking a horrable chapter in our history, and telling it with senitivity. He did not go into gory detail about the death of so many and did put in the good side of the story too.
6 member(s) found this review helpful.
An engrossing narrative. You live the sorrows and victories right along with the protagonists. As well as telling about the blizzard, the author gives us biographies of the various people trapped by the weather.

Rosanna M. (
ohiowy) wrote on 4/4/2009...
4 member(s) found this review helpful.
I read this book a few years ago, and it still sticks with me. Knowing the blizzard was coming,I wanted to warn the kids and the teacher. I rooted for them to live, knowing the outcome would not be affected. I loved learning about the individual lives, and didn't know which ones would live and which ones would die. The way the stories are told make this book the gem it is. Laskin peels away the layers of their stories. The story that could have been a small lost part of South Dakota becomes the story of a generation lost to a rougue storm.
4 member(s) found this review helpful.
I read this while researching my ancestry in Minnesota and North Dakota. A bit heavy on facts, but all in all it was readable.
4 member(s) found this review helpful.
This is an incredible book. The author takes you on an incredible/horrifying exploration through the blizzard of 1888. His words paint an incredible visual effect. You will be moved to tears.
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
Excellent history of the disastrous blizzard of 1888 on the Dakota prairies.

Gail S. (
gail7254) wrote on 8/27/2006...
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
Very interesting book -true-about a blizzard that sweeps the plains during the winter of 1888 and the children that lwft for school on a balmy day to find themselves in a raging storm on the way home....how many died trying to protect their siblings.

Steven R. (
rawl18) wrote on 3/29/2006...
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
This book tells a fascinating account of the Blizzard of 1888. This book details the meteorological aspects of the disaster, and would be of special interest to people in that field.
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
Interesting and tragic story. Great personal stories. Enjoyed the history of life in that part of the country and the development of the weather reporting system. Enoyable, quick read.

Marianne S. (
sfc95) - Decatur, IL wrote on 11/13/2008...
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
I just could not get into this book. I know it got great reviews, but it was so slow moving and it introduced so many characters that I just wanted the blizzard to come. I should say I am not a fam of non fiction to that may have attributed to my dislike of the book, but the other reviews and the description made me request it.