My latest audiobook just went on sale on Audible. Very proud of this work since it covers a part of Florida's history that should be remembered. Black Cloud: The Deadly Hurricane of 1928 was written by journalist and author Eliot Kleinberg.
"The deadly hurricane of 1928 claimed 2500 lives, and the long-forgotten story of the casualties, as told in Black Cloud,
continues to stir passion. Among the dead were 700 black Floridian men,
women, and children who were buried in an unmarked West Palm Beach
ditch during a racist recovery and rebuilding effort that conscripted
the labor of blacks much like latter-day slaves. Palm Beach Post
reporter Eliot Kleinberg has penned this gripping tale from dozens of
interviews with survivors, diary entries, accounts from newspapers,
government documents, and reports from the National Weather Service and
the Red Cross. Immortalized in Zora Neale Hurston's classic Their Eyes Were Watching God,
thousands of poor blacks had nowhere to run when the waters of Lake
Okeechobee rose. No one spoke for them, no one stood up for them, and no
one could save them. With heroic tales of survival and loss, this book
finally gives the dead the dignity they deserve. The new, updated
edition of this important book is published by the Florida Historical
Society Press."
To listen to a sample and/or purchase the book, head to Audible here.
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