Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 August 2019
New Orleans, before Hurricane Katrina, was a city with numerous and substantial problems. Storytelling, perhaps as a coping mechanism, was a significant feature of the local culture. With Hurricane Katrina, however, both features of the city became dramatically more pronounced, as bookstores were flooded with books about the storm and the devastating aftermath of the levee failure, several of them of significant literary value that made lasting contributions to the understanding of this highly distinctive city.
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