About the Author:
Jeré Longman, a sportswriter for The New York Times who has written about sports for over thirty years, grew up on the Cajun prairie in Eunice, Louisiana. Jeré is the author of the New York Times bestseller and Notable Book, Among the Heroes: United Flight 93 and the Passengers and Crew Who Fought Back, The Girls of Summer, and If Football's a Religion, Then Why Don't We Have a Prayer? He lives in Philadelphia.
Review:
"New Orleans Times-Picayune," October 18 "Longman combines a great sports story with a telling human saga...Longman knows the culture, and he beautifully spins his tale of sports triumph into something grander, a chronicle of Louisiana life, a plea to save the wetlands, an examination on the demands on these young men and their families in the wake of horrific disaster." "The Shreveport Times (LA)," October 31, 2008 ""The Hurricanes" [is] an addition to a growing legacy of books relating to Louisiana high school football and perhaps the most poignant." "New Orleans Times-Picayune," October 18 "Longman combines a great sports story with a telling human saga...Longman knows the culture, and he beautifully spins his tale of sports triumph into something grander, a chronicle of Louisiana life, a plea to save the wetlands, an examination on the demands on these young men and their families in the wake of horrific disaster." "Sports Illustrated," September 15, 2008 ""The Hurricanes,.".is the richest, most engrossing treatment of high school football and community since "Friday Night Lights,"" "New York Times Book Review," September 7, 2008 "The losses and the struggle for revival [Longman] movingly examines take place in the real world of FEMA trailers and displaced families as much as in the artificial one of a football game." "New York Post," August 24, 2008 "The Hurricanes" is solidly reported, but it's a sports book at heart." "Biloxi Sun-Herald," July, 27, 2008 "A chill ran down my spine as I was reading the first chapter of "The Hurricanes," a story of high school football in south Louisiana in the wake of Hurricane Katrina." Kevin Merida, associate editor of "The Washington Post" and editor of "Being a Black Man: At the Corner of Progress and Peril" "Jere Longman's "The Hurricanes" is a riveting triumph. Written with exquisite detail, it has soul and verve and poignancy. Longman captures not only the human drama of a storm-displaced high school football team, but reminds us that the tragedies of Katrina live on. From the moment I started reading this book, I didn't want to put it down." Neil Swidey, author of "The Assist" "This captivating tale of struggle and triumph in post-Katrina Louisiana is ostensibly about football. But powered by Jere Longman's restless curiosity, it delivers so much more, taking readers from the gridiron to FEMA trailer parks and oyster grounds, and proving once again that big new stories really get interesting only after the packs of live-shot reporters have ridden their satellite trucks out of town." Buzz Bissinger, author of "Friday Night Lights" and "Three Nights in August" "Jere Longman has written a book that is beautiful, poignant, and shows us all that sports can be, and so rarely is anymore, in our winning-at-all-costs culture. You will love "The Hurricanes,""
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