Questions for discussion
- "The blizzard literally froze a single day in time," Laskin writes in the
Prologue. "It sent a clean, fine blade through the history of the prairie." Talk
about how the blizzard epitomized prairie history, how this single event came to
symbolize the hardships and calamities of the pioneer period.
- The biggest natural disaster of recent years is Hurricane Katrina, and there
are some striking parallels between Katrina and The Children's Blizzard.
Both affected large geographical areas; both were forecast well in advance but
nonetheless caught residents unprepared; both provoked a huge response in the
media. Do you think The Children's Blizzard was the Hurricane Katrina of
its day? What, if anything, have we as a nation learned since 1888 about how to
cope with natural disaster?
- The Children's Blizzard is, at heart, the story of families --
immigrants who came to the prairie for a better life; Civil War veterans who
moved west after the war; Mennonites in search of religious freedom. How do the
stories in the book resonate to your own family stories of settlement,
immigration, hardship and survival? Were any of your ancestors affected by
natural disasters? Do you have any memoirs that relatives have written of their
early experiences in this country?
- Do you think anyone bore the responsibility for the deaths inflicted by the
storm? To what extent do you think Lieutenant Woodruff is to blame for failing
to get the word out in time? What about General Greely -- do you see him as a
narrow-minded bureaucrat or an official trying to do his job? Could Greely or
Woodruff done anything differently before or after the storm hit?
- The narrative of the book is driven by suspense and surprise: as you read,
you simply don't know whether children like Walter Allen, Lena Woebbecke, and
May Hunt's pupils will survive the night or freeze to death. Talk about how the
author sets up suspense and expectation. Do you think the style of the book is
well-suited to the subject matter?
- Laskin has said that his intent was to make the book read like a novel while
maintaining strict historical accuracy. Has he succeeded? Which "characters" in
the book did you care about most and why?
- One of the most haunting passages in the book is when Anna Kaufmann looks at
the frozen bodies of her three sons and laughs. Discuss this reaction. What do
you imagine was going through Anna's head at that moment? Have you heard of
similarly strange reactions to trauma or tragedy?
- "Exposure," the chapter about hypothermia and frostbite, is quite graphic
and medically detailed in its depiction of exactly what happens to the body as
it freezes to death. Why do you think Laskin chose to write it this way? Does
this graphic approach deepen your understanding or distance you from what the
boys were experiencing?
- Compare The Children's Blizzard to other disaster books that have
been published in recent years -- Isaac's Storm, The Johnstown Flood, The
Perfect Storm. Talk about ways in which the various books dramatize the natural
event and narrate the story of people battling the elements. Discuss the
different ways in which the authors work in history and meteorology.
- In the final pages, Laskin quotes columnist Nicholas D. Kristof's assertion
that "It's time for us to acknowledge one of America's greatest mistakes, a
140-year scheme that has failed at a cost of trillions of dollars, countless
lives and immeasurable heartbreak: the settlement of the Great Plains." Do you
agree that this was a great mistake? Do you think the book supports this
assertion? What kind of future do you see for farmers and families on the
plains?