Taylor Trade Publishing
Pages: 260
Trim: 5½ x 8¾
978-1-58979-298-2 • Paperback • June 2006 • $16.95 • (£12.95)
978-1-4617-3370-6 • eBook • June 2006 • $9.99 • (£7.95)
Subjects: History / United States / State & Local / South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV),
History / United States / General
Robert Mykle has written for the Cape Cod Times, The Palm Beach Post, and numerous other publications. He lives in Lake Worth, Florida.
Mykle does a nice job of portraying Everglades frontier life: the moonshine, the politics, the path of development.
— Michael Grunwald; The New Republic
Mykle sifted through Florida history—geographic, economic, meteorological and cultural—and quotes from several dozen interviews to tell his story, zeroing in on many of the individuals who affected and were affected by this mind-boggling piece of windy and wet American history. "'I think about it every day,'" survivor Vernie Boots told Mykle. Though this killer hurricane struck nearly 74 years ago, if you read this fast-paced book, you'll have a hard time forgetting it too.
— Chicago Tribune
Mykle tells this saga of epic destruction with short episodes that gradually grow together, like cross-cutting scenes in a movie. The approach, and the book, both work well. Florida history is the better for Mykle's book.
— Palm Beach Post
This is a solidly researched, engagingly written snapshot of Florida.
— The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Mykle's research provided a window into a disappearing breed of pioneers, who remembered the violent storms and the in-between years when a hardscrabble lifestyle was the norm.
— Sharon Jones; News-Sun
The true stories Robert Mykle tells in Killer 'Cane: The Deadly Hurricane of 1928 paint a picture of nature's terrible immensity that's the stuff of nightmares.
— Orlando Sentinel
This is a superbly written book.
— Velma Daniels; News Chief
This book is a winner. The treatment of individual threads woven into the whole is a good approach and keeps the details alive, effective, and not obscured by the overall event.
— Dr. Joseph R. Orsenigo, President of the Glades Historical Society