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Warning

The Story of Cyclone Tracy

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Warning is the definitive account of one of the most frightening extreme weather events our country has ever seen.

When Cyclone Tracy swept down on Darwin at Christmas 1974, the weather became not just a living thing but a killer. Tracy destroyed an entire city, left seventy-one people dead and ripped the heart out of Australia's season of goodwill.

For the fortieth anniversary of the nation's most iconic natural disaster, Sophie Cunningham has gone back to the eyewitness accounts of those who lived through the devastation, and those who faced the heartbreaking clean-up and the back-breaking rebuilding. From the quiet stirring of the service-station bunting that heralded the catastrophe to the wholesale slaughter of the dogs that followed it, Cunningham brings to the tale a novelist's eye for detail and an exhilarating narrative drive. And a sober appraisal of what Tracy means to us now, as we face more - and more destructive - extreme weather with every year that passes.

Compulsively readable and undeniably moving, Warning is the essential non-fiction book of 2014.

Sophie Cunningham is the author of two novels, Geography (2004) and Bird (2008) and the non-fiction Melbourne (UNSW Press, 2011). She is a former editor of Meanjin and was until recently the chair of the Australia Council's Literature Board.

'The strength and beauty of this book is the way it delves into the lives of the people affected and tries to understand their responses, their courage and their failings. Cunningham argues that these kinds of natural disasters are going to become more prevalent as the effects of climate change make extreme weather conditions more likely. This book is no polemic: it's a gripping and visceral tale.' Mark Rubbo, Readings

'Highly accomplished...compelling.' Age/SMH

'Cunningham has pieced together a pacey and energetic insight into the build up, experience and aftermath of the cyclone...It's a great read and, given the subject, it is strangely hopeful.' Big Issue

'Along with an eye for good stories and a knack for telling them, Sophie Cunningham brings a contextualising political intelligence. What she is interested in is how natural disasters are also social and political events, and the period details amount to more than the sideburns and lairy shirts...What happens in natural disasters depends on how communities work; the effects and aftermaths of those disasters are in fact man-made. As the future promises more and more extreme weather events whose causes as well as effects are anthropogenic, Cunningham's gripping book contributes to new ways of thinking about them.' Sunday Age/Sun Herald

'Sophie Cunningham has done a tremendous job in gathering the voices - from then and now - of those who were there and during the clean-up [of Cyclone Tracy]. The result is vivid storytelling, gripping from beginning to end.' Townsville Bulletin/Cairns Post

'Warning: The Story of Cyclone Tracy is a brilliant book and on the anniversary of such devastation, it is a timely reminder to cherish everything you have in your life because in one night it could all be blown away.' Salty Popcorn

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    • Books+Publishing

      June 19, 2014

      Sophie Cunningham has a novelist’s eye for action and ear for dialogue, and she brings both to the story of Darwin’s devastation by Cyclone Tracy. Cunningham draws on a range of intimate sources, including oral testimonies, interviews, diaries, family histories and newspapers, seeking out Darwinians’ first-hand experiences of the 1974 cyclone and using these individual stories to frame the large-scale destruction. She speaks to scientists and authorities, but the most compelling testimonies come from locals who found themselves in the cyclone’s path. These people share the awe and terror the storm’s apocalyptic force provoked. Warning is accessible reading, its compelling narrative informed by scientific fact but not overly bogged down by complex detail. Cunningham views the interaction of humans and natural disasters through the lens of climate change, showing that we are only now beginning to comprehend the damage humans have wrought on the planet. A work of contemporary historical analysis, Warning sits alongside evocative narrative nonfiction such as Anna Krien’s Into the Woods, though Cunningham’s presence in the story is less pronounced. As in her previous nonfiction book, Melbourne, the telling of significant historical events is deeply grounded in human experience, and small details convey the story of Cyclone Tracy with visceral power.

      Veronica Sullivan is a bookseller and deputy online editor of Kill Your Darlings

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  • English

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