KATRINA AND THE FRENCHMAN:
A JOURNAL FROM THE STREET
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ISBN: 978-0-9812459-0-4

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About
KATRINA AND THE FRENCHMAN: A JOURNAL FROM THE STREET
THE BEST POSSIBLE PLACE
THE WORST POSSIBLE TIME
On August 27, 2005, a Carnival cruise ship docked
at the harbor of New Orleans. Amongst the arrivals were Canadian
writer Marcy Italiano and her husband, G, wrapping a wild 10-year
anniversary celebration in a city they dearly loved.
But this was less than 48 hours before the levees
crumbled, and the nightmare began.
Katrina and The Frenchman is a haunting, harrowing
first-person account of the Hurricane Katrina disaster, seen
from the perspective of two tourists trapped in a city gripped
by terror, and coming apart at the seams. Repeatedly finding
light in the darkness, and then watching the darkness swallow
it whole. Finally forced to escape on their own, when the system
broke down completely.
Mostly, though, this is a story about beautiful
people, and what they become as their hope runs out.
“I love this book. It’s a
riveting story, intimately told with skill, deep humility, startling
honesty, and the kind of stark photographic recall most people
only achieve when they find themselves suddenly slapped within
an inch of their lives by death. Which is, of course, precisely
what happened; and that profound revelation is delivered intact
throughout the course of this beautiful, powerful work.”
-- John Skipp, bestselling author of Jake’s
Wake and The Light At The End
Marcy Italiano is sharing their story so that
donations from sales of Katrina And The Frenchman: A Journal
From The Street can be made to Common Ground Relief, and to
help the people of New Orleans.
**Update August
26th, 2009**
After the first two months I'd like to let you
know that a donation has already been sent to Common Ground
Relief.
Thanks to all of you who bought a copy of the book and helped
make a difference.

(Future donations will not
be announced.)
Official/Professional blurbs
about KATRINA AND THE FRENCHMAN: A JOURNAL FROM THE STREET...
"I devoured this book in one weekend... This
book is part therapy, part journal and part history. It is a
painful yet useful read to experience such an 'unfair' and horrific
storm. Thank you, Marcy Italiano..."
-- Cindy Matthews in her review in The Record
(read the full review
here)
"KATRINA AND THE FRENCHMAN: A JOURNAL FROM
THE STREET is a compelling personal account of a national tragedy.
Harrowing, vivid and incredibly touching, it will open your
eyes to the catastrophe that befell New Orleans."
-- Christopher Golden & Tim Lebbon, authors of Mind
the Gap and The Map of Moments
“Reading Marcy Italiano's KATRINA AND THE
FRENCHMAN: A JOURNAL FROM THE STREET was at times so emotionally
stunning that I literally had to put it aside for a half hour
or more to process what I'd read before I could continue. When
it was over I knew the scar this devastating read left on me
emotionally, spiritually wouldn't be going away any time soon.
And it hasn't.”
-- Diana Barron, author of the Bram Stoker Nominated, Phantom
Feast
“It was incredibly powerful and utterly
gripping, for sure. I read it in one sitting, with breaks to
just cry. Oh, hey, I'm going to cry again now just thinking
about it.”
-- Mehitobel Wilson, author of the collection Dangerous
Red
"Everyone knows that bad things happened
to New Orleans four years ago. If you read this book, you'll
realize that you had no idea how bad those things actually were,
and what an atrocity it is that the city was ignored, left to
die, and when it survived, never given a fair chance to recover.
This book has more amazing characters than any novel you've
ever read, with the possible exception of War and Peace,
and every one of them is real. They are heroic, terrified, good,
evil, desperate, caring, uncaring and any other human quality
you can imagine. Buy the book. Read the book. Trust me on this."
-- Dave Hogg, Associated Press Sports Writer
"In Katrina and the Frenchman: A Journal
from the Street, Marcy Italiano gives us a front-row view of
her nerve-shearing personal voyage through one of the most horrifying
disasters in recent memory. Written while the ragged wound in
her emotions still burned fresh, it's of the most disturbing
reads I've ever picked up."
-- Mark W. Worthen, author of short stories "Old Hippies,
Duct Tape and Tough Choices", "With Black Curtains"
and more.
"I went to see Marcy Italiano and Tom Monteleone
read. Marcy was great, reading a very touching journal entry
from when she was stuck in New Orleans post-Katrina. There were
few dry eyes in the room."
-- Nate Southard blog
entry (August 2006), author of Just Like Hell
"I want to give a special shout out to Marcy
Italiano (www.marcyitaliano.com) who read from her soon to be
published (any publisher that doesn’t pick this up is
either stupid or crazy) book about her and her husband experiences
at ground zero in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina."
-- Robert Shuster from Sevancide.com
From Bev Vincent:
“Novelists have often written about what might happen
if a city becomes cut off from the rest of the world. They speculate
about how humanity will react under these conditions. Picture
scenes from Stephen King's THE STAND where New Yorkers struggle
to leave the island after it is devastated by an epidemic. Disaster
brings out the best and the worst in people, but we don't often
have anything from the real world to decide if the fiction writers
got it right or not. In August 2005, nature handed us such an
example.
“Hurricane Katrina was one of those events
that people watched around the world in real time. In Katrina
and the Frenchman: A Journal from the Street, Marcy Italiano
offers a first person account of what she and her husband experienced
from the day before the storm struck until they were ultimately
able to escape from New Orleans many days later. Those of us
who watched on television only got part of the picture--we could
never truly appreciate the horror of the situation from the
comfort of our living rooms--but at times we knew a lot more
about the "big picture" than those on the ground.
Italiano takes us through each day, from the point of no return
after which people were forced to remain in the city regardless
of their desires, through the harrowing hours of the storm itself
and the aftermath, which was in many ways worse than the hurricane.
Food and water became luxury items, as did information. Rumors
swept through the city like flood waters. Another hurricane
was coming. Walls of water were bearing down on the city. Buses
were coming. Buses weren't coming. Much of the information received
by those who were stranded was either wrong, misleading or useless.
Invocations to abandon the city now, issued long after the point
where that was still possible. Faulty directions. Lack of organization
at all levels.
“Italiano introduces us to a small group
of survivors, referring to them by colorful nicknames--a city
of origin or a distinguishing feature. She takes us through
the tedium of waiting and not knowing, their gradual loss of
faith that they might ever get home again. Her book is intensely
personal. She reveals her anguishes, both physical and emotional.
Having to decide what belongings were worth keeping and which
ones could be jettisoned when they were forced to lighten their
loads. Anger at the unfairness of the situation, and grievances
over small issues that were magnified out of proportion due
to the stress of the situation. And, ultimately, the terror
didn't end when they were on a bus headed to Houston. Their
escape was fortuitous and she recounts a combination of survivor
guilt--when she became one of us, watching the disaster continue
to unfold on her own television--and post-traumatic stress reinforced
by the pervasive curiosity of everyone they talked with in the
weeks after they returned to Canada. Her anguish as she watched
friends try to decide what to do when Hurricane Rita materialized
a few weeks later. Even nature took a jab at them, sending the
remains of Rita to tumble the gazebo in their back yard.
“KATRINA AND THE FRENCHMAN: A JOURNAL FROM
THE STREET is a fast read, constructed in the form of a personal
diary or a blog, but it will have a lasting and profound impact
on readers as they are escorted on a guided tour of the closest
thing to hell this continent has experienced in a long time.”
-- Bev Vincent, author of The Road to the Dark Tower
Further Feedback
from readers...
"Just letting you know I received my copy
of your book today. I had already decided beforehand that I
would wait for a while to read it, because I know it will be
an emotional journey. That being said, I'm on page 54. And I
was only looking it over! I guess I'm as ready to take the journey
as I'll ever be. I want to say that I'm looking forward to reading
it, and yet that somehow doesn't seem appropriate, given the
subject matter. It's more like I hear it calling me and I can't
turn away."
-- Carolyn Kelly
"Your book arrived yesterday, which is amazingly
quick. I didn’t go pick up the mail until about 6:00 p.m.
and I was going to start it last night. Then I let (my wife)
have a look and she gobbled it up. I haven’t seen her
read a book in probably 5 or 6 years – she’s usually
so busy or tired at night – but she ran off to bed and
read the entire book front to back. She loved it, Marcy, and
told me to tell you how incredible she thought it was. She couldn’t
stop or put it down until she knew the whole story. Now it’s
my turn. I’ll hopefully get to it today and give you my
thoughts soon too. Just wanted to get on here and let you know
it arrived and what (my wife) thought."
-- Anonymous
"I'm enjoying reading your book so much I
was up till 1:30 am and then couldn't sleep and read some more."
-- Angela Cameron
"I read the book. You got me!! I read it
in one sitting – I was going to bed and stayed up all
night. Powerful! I felt I was there. Your intimate reactions
brought life and reality to those of us who watched the aftermath
via CNN news. You put a face and soul to the horror. KEEP WRITING!!"
--Teresa Toth