Description: From the Titanic to the Boston molasses flood, investigate five famous historical disasters just like a real reporter--through facts, eyewitnesses, and clues--with Emmy-winning journalist Anna Crowley Redding.
Delve deeper into some of the most dramatic disasters in history! Using case files full of firsthand accounts, critical facts, do-at-home experiments, and clues, readers can become disaster detectives and determine for themselves what happened and why. Take on the sinking of the Titanic, the crash of the Hindenburg, the Great Influenza epidemic of 1918, the Boston molasses flood, and the fire that decimated the city of Chicago. A "Your Mission!" introduction gets readers actively involved, and an inviting layout that evokes the feel of a working case file, complete with paperclipped notes and important pictures, keeps them eager for the next clue. Author Anna Crowley Redding brings her extensive journalism background to this engrossing dive into history, and Robbie Cathro's active illustrations bring the scenes--and the real people involved--to life. Back matter includes extensive source notes and a bibliography for young journalists who want to get an even bigger scoop.Review Quotes: Fact-file inserts and eyewitness accounts help readers understand the causes, courses, and aftermaths of five historical calamities. . . the blow-by-blow narratives make for absorbing reading, and the substantial bibliography at the end should please even the most demanding young documentarians. . . . Catastrophically engrossing.
--Kirkus Reviews
--Booklist This hits all the right notes of an informative middle grade read with an engrossing subject, intelligently designed organization, and a welcoming tone, making it an easy sell to readers who still can't get enough of the I Survived books.
--Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books Disasters are a perpetual source of curiosity for kids, and this book from the Danger Files series offers fresh ways of learning. . . .This is sure to be popular with researchers, browsers, and catastrophe-minded leisure readers.
--Booklist