"All Booked Up" Reads Dark Tide

cover of dark tide
A giant holding tank collapes sending a flood of molasses through the streets--sounds like Willy Wonka gone bad, doesn't it? Unfortunately, this was not a fairy tale, but a real event that happened in Boston in 1919. Dark Tide, by Stephen Puleo, is All Booked Up's selection for March, telling the story of this bizarre event and the political climate of that time. Join the group for discussion of this book at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 1st. Copies are available at the circulation desk.

Book Description:
Shortly after noon on January 15, 1919, a fifty-foot-tall steel tank filled with 2.3 million gallons of molasses collapsed on Boston"s waterfront, disgorging its contents as a fifteen-foot-high wave of molasses that briefly traveled at thirty-five miles per hour. When the tide receded, a section of the city"s North End had been transformed into a war zone. The Great Boston Molasses Flood claimed the lives of twenty-one people and scores of animals, injured 150, and caused widespread destruction. But the molasses flood was more than an isolated event. Its story overlays America"s story during a tumultuous decade in our history. Tracing the era from the tank"s construction in 1915 through the multiyear lawsuit that followed the tragedy, Dark Tide uses the drama of the flood to examine the sweeping changes brought about by World War I, Prohibition, the Anarchist movement, the Red Scare, immigration, and the role of big business in society.

About the Author:
Stephen Puleo is a former award-winning newspaper reporter and now works in corporate public relations in the Boston area. He has done extensive research on Boston"s North End, where the molasses flood took place, and is a frequent contributor to American History magazine. He lives in the Boston area.
[ An interview with Stephen Puleo. ]

[ THe ReaDiNG RooM ]

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