Dark Wind: A True Account Of Hurricane Gloria's Assault On Fire Island

September 25, 1985. The worst storm in half a century is headed towards the United States, her point of landfall--Fire Island, a narrow sandbar hugging the shore of Long Island. The East Coast is evacuated for hundreds of miles north and south, but on Fire Island itself, ten people refuse to leave.

In Dark Wind, a remarkable work of nonfiction, John Jiler tells the story of those people. A gay man with AIDS stayed behind because he had nothing left to lose. One pair of fiends tried to endure the storm with deep, meditative prayer; another trio, with a wild, chattering cocktail party. Also on the island lay the Sunken Forest, an ancient woods teeming with birds, plant, and animal life that was no less profoundly threatened by the power of Hurricane Gloria.

In this literary tour de force, Jiler combines the results of in-depth interviews with the survivors and detailed knowledge of the unique social and natural history of Fire Island to produce a panoramic account of nature in its inexplicable, sublime fury.

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Dark Wind: A True Account Of Hurricane Gloria's Assault On Fire Island

September 25, 1985. The worst storm in half a century is headed towards the United States, her point of landfall--Fire Island, a narrow sandbar hugging the shore of Long Island. The East Coast is evacuated for hundreds of miles north and south, but on Fire Island itself, ten people refuse to leave.

In Dark Wind, a remarkable work of nonfiction, John Jiler tells the story of those people. A gay man with AIDS stayed behind because he had nothing left to lose. One pair of fiends tried to endure the storm with deep, meditative prayer; another trio, with a wild, chattering cocktail party. Also on the island lay the Sunken Forest, an ancient woods teeming with birds, plant, and animal life that was no less profoundly threatened by the power of Hurricane Gloria.

In this literary tour de force, Jiler combines the results of in-depth interviews with the survivors and detailed knowledge of the unique social and natural history of Fire Island to produce a panoramic account of nature in its inexplicable, sublime fury.

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Dark Wind: A True Account Of Hurricane Gloria's Assault On Fire Island

Dark Wind: A True Account Of Hurricane Gloria's Assault On Fire Island

by John Jiler
Dark Wind: A True Account Of Hurricane Gloria's Assault On Fire Island

Dark Wind: A True Account Of Hurricane Gloria's Assault On Fire Island

by John Jiler

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Overview

September 25, 1985. The worst storm in half a century is headed towards the United States, her point of landfall--Fire Island, a narrow sandbar hugging the shore of Long Island. The East Coast is evacuated for hundreds of miles north and south, but on Fire Island itself, ten people refuse to leave.

In Dark Wind, a remarkable work of nonfiction, John Jiler tells the story of those people. A gay man with AIDS stayed behind because he had nothing left to lose. One pair of fiends tried to endure the storm with deep, meditative prayer; another trio, with a wild, chattering cocktail party. Also on the island lay the Sunken Forest, an ancient woods teeming with birds, plant, and animal life that was no less profoundly threatened by the power of Hurricane Gloria.

In this literary tour de force, Jiler combines the results of in-depth interviews with the survivors and detailed knowledge of the unique social and natural history of Fire Island to produce a panoramic account of nature in its inexplicable, sublime fury.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781466883581
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
Publication date: 10/14/2014
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 260
File size: 357 KB

About the Author

John Jiler is the author of the 1994 nonfiction title Dark Wind.


John Jiler is the author of the 1994 nonfiction title Dark Wind: A True Account Of Hurricane Gloria's Assault On Fire Island.

Read an Excerpt

Dark Wind

A True Account of Hurricane Gloria's Assault on Fire Island


By John Jiler

St. Martin's Press

Copyright © 1993 John Jiler
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4668-8358-1



CHAPTER 1

Hot air rises. Cold air rushes in to replace it, and that rush is the wind. The wind is a gift from a God. It cools, it dries, it eases the mind, it fills a sail. It could power a city, if only we'd let it. It moves out the old, moves in the new. Without it, the world would be a stagnant hell. But the meteorologists, who spend their days looking above the clouds, who watch the great winds blow across the earth ... they know that there is also such a thing as an ill wind. It fans a fire. It blows a ship onto a reef. It freezes a newborn lamb, wet and glistening, to death.

Hot air rises. Cold air rushes in to replace it. The hotter the hot air, the colder the cold air, the faster the rush, the bigger the wind. The desert, with its scorched white days and frigid black nights, is a place of enormous wind. In Africa they have names for it. The Egyptian wind Khamsin raises walls of sand a hundred feet in the air and propels them along the Red Sea to Cairo, when the heat of April has begun to rise off the ancient streets. In its path Khamsin will rip apart the tents of the Bedouin and the Berber, and try to kill their plants, their animals, and their children.

In summer, the ill wind is called Sirocco. It blasts northward across the Sahara to the baking Libyan coast, skims the moisture off the top of the sea and then cloaks itself, hot and wet, over the southern cities of Europe. The people of Marseilles and Athens and all the towns of Sicily will feel, for months, as though they are locked in a windowless room with their own germs.

As autumn comes, and the sun moves back to the equator and beyond, lavishing its attention again on the grasslands and savannahs and lakes of Central Africa, the most dreaded enemy of all appears ... the wind called Harmattan. Born on a cold starless night, Harmattan has no mercy.

On the Atlantic coast, the mountains and forests are green with the new drenching rains — the gift of a different wind, a benevolent one blowing in off the southern ocean. Harmattan will defy that wind. Gathering its force above the ancient capital of Timbuktu, Harmattan will scream down the forgotten trade routes, the same ones that camels once followed, bowed with ivory and ostrich feathers. Harmattan will wither the cacao fields of Mali, Harmattan will parch the mahogany forests of Senegal so badly the farmers will be sorry for every inch of rain they dared accept from the southern wind, and Harmattan will drape bustling Dakar with air so fetid it will beg for forgiveness. Then, as its final act, Harmattan will move out to sea where it will join forces with the darkest wind of all: Trade Wind, the same wind that took the Africans, in chains, away from their homeland.


Fire Island, Wednesday, September 25, 1985

Dana Wallace sits on the deck of his oceanfront home with a margarita in his hand. Unfortunately, he'll have to do without the salt. Doctor's orders. Wallace has lived life pretty fast and wide and now, at sixty-eight, after a heart bypass, he'll have to watch himself. Even the booze isn't a good idea.

But Dana Wallace drains his margarita anyhow, sucking the lime dry. He is a man of many triumphs in life, not the least of which is the seaside empire over which he now gazes. He did not come by those triumphs by backing off of things because they "weren't a good idea." People who do exercise that kind of caution are people who Wallace has never understood or trusted. They are the kind of people who enjoy paperwork, or who at least do paperwork when it's required of them. Dana Wallace starts his fires with paperwork. He thinks that young people who apply for a job and ask about the pension plan are sick, timid souls who miss the whole point of life.

Once on a train he met a man who was commuting to a job he had held for thirty years. Wallace was in a mischievous mood and he began computing, out loud, the number of hours in his life the man had spent on the train. The result was horrifying. The man was angry and embarrassed, so to make amends Wallace offered to buy him a drink once they got to Penn Station. Over the drink, the man not only forgave Wallace, but began to see his point. The man called in sick for the first time in thirty years, and they both went out to the racetrack. Wallace remembers it as one of his most joyous and positive days. He saved a soul.

Dana Wallace has had his joyous days, ripe and pulsing with the bounty of life, and he's had his miserable days, when the great risks didn't pay off, when the wide-open, big-hearted guy just got badly, painfully screwed.

Most of those times have had to do with women. He's had three wives and the most recent, a woman much younger than himself, left him because she had "some growing to do." Wallace tried to understand that notion, but now, six years later, still carrying the torch, he has bitterly concluded that "I have some growing to do" is a euphemism for "So long, sucker, don't forget the alimony." He's stuck on the point, but he's too smart to think that that makes him some kind of a noble romantic hero, some Bogart drinking under a ceiling fan. He knows that he's obsessed with someone who's long gone, and that he must get on with life. But he still loves her, he chases women who look like her, and he drinks far too much (he had been on the wagon for many years before she left him).

His old age is not shaping up the way it should, given his accomplishments, his money, and his zest for life. He is not as close to his only son as he might be. His friends are dying off. He has lost his enthusiasm for photography, once his vocation and his greatest passion (many of the great photos of World War II, the haunted faces on the beaches of Saipan and Salerno, are his). New developments in the human race, as he observes them from his deck, fill him with contempt and suspicion. The hippies were unkempt, disrespectful, soft, and girlish. The yuppies, soulless and immaculate, are worse.

What new trend will follow he cares not. For solace and companionship he turns to the animal world, to his faithful pair of black Labrador retrievers, and especially to his amazing stable of horses. Dana Wallace somehow coaxed an acre of grass out of this parched sandspit of an island, and to the envy and astonishment of other islanders, he has trained thoroughbreds here, to win allowance races at Belmont and to gallop through the surf at dawn with a hundred-and-eighty-pound man in the saddle. But even the horses are reminders of Maureen, the young third wife, who loved to ride them, who sat beside Dana in horse trailers as they'd roam state fairs across the South and take away the prize money and make love in motels beside the road.

Dana Wallace is a lonely man. But he won't go under. Rather than accept with grace the insults, infirmities, and sorrows of old age, he will face them squarely and say, "Fuck you."


* * *

The devil wind out of Africa, having spent its hot anger, has joined the gentle trade winds across the Atlantic. It is a complete change of character. Innocent, constant, almost playful, the trades push westward with no hint of their blast-furnace beginnings.

"Four days we sailed before the fresh trade breeze," wrote an inspired sailor. "The ocean was piled on end about us in white-crested ridges, flashing green on their sides, violet in the hollows. The sky was an unbroken sweep of crystalline ether, fading into neutral on the sea rim, while a glorious rush of pure keen air awoke weird music from every tight-strung shroud, and filled each cranny of the ship with life and freshness."

Frequently the lyrical journey belied the grim cargo, black flesh chained together in airless, malarial cells. When the trades failed, the nightmare was complete. The soon-to-be slaves were forced to take up oars and, with every aching stroke, row themselves farther from their homeland.

But even before the slave trade, other goods came to the New World in the holds of even smaller wooden sailing ships — gold, ebony, ostrich plumes, peppers, cloth, and chocolate crossed the African continent, and then the wide Atlantic. Earlier still, primitive men helped to spread the race by rigging crude papyrus sails to catch the wind, and hauling themselves and their families to the bulging coast of South America.

The trades have blown since man has lived on earth, and the principle behind them is the same principle that propels their hellish ancestor Harmattan across the desert. Hot air rises. Cooler air rushes in to replace it, and that rush is the wind. At the equator, the earth's greatest heat rises and flows north and south toward the poles. But by the time it has made even a third of that journey, by the time it has reached the latitude of, say, North Carolina, it has cooled to the point where it sinks. Then it rushes back to the equator to replace the hot air rising there. It's a complete cycle, and were there nothing more to it, the wind would blow due south to the equator.

But there is something more to it. The earth spins. There is a little "english" on the ball, as bowlers and pool sharks like to say. So the wind doesn't blow due south, but twists a bit with the spin of the earth and comes out of the east, and all the oceans of the earth are carved with broad twisting channels.

The same thing happens in the Southern Hemisphere, but in the opposite direction. There is an old wives' tale that if you poured water into a sink in Rio de Janeiro, its last eddies would be sucked down the drain in a clockwise motion, the opposite of what the water would do in your North American bathtub. If the sink and the tub were big enough, say hundreds of miles wide, the tale would be true. This is the Coriolis effect — the twist of the earth. It is what brings wind not from the north but from the east across the Atlantic, and blew the slaves and the plumes and the gold and the chocolate across the sea.


* * *

Dana Wallace finishes a second, smaller margarita, and pours the dregs down his kitchen sink, watching them disappear in a counterclockwise swirl. He is cutting short his ordinarily inviolable cocktail hour. He has work to do. It is September, time to clean up after the tourists.

Fire Island is a narrow ribbon of sand that runs from west to east almost at a right angle from the American coastline. An hour from New York, it is a favorite refuge from the summer oven of the city. By the thousands, New Yorkers young and old, fat and thin, famous and obscure pile on the tiny boats that ply the Great South Bay to the two dozen communities that punctuate the thirty miles of Fire Island. They trek across the narrow sandbar of an island and within minutes are on the wide white beach, basted with oils cheap and exotic as they roast to every hue of the human rainbow. Before them the Atlantic stretches endlessly. Were they to dive in and swim straight, they would not come ashore until Brazil. In the evening they retire to their bungalows and hotel rooms or remain by the sea — resting, contemplating, looking for cool breezes or hot sex.

As they do every summer, the islanders, the year-round residents, address themselves to the problem of where the tourists will eat and sleep and drink and defecate, of how their bicycles will be kept pumped up, of how the tiny shaded walkways will be kept free of their excesses.

All of this the islanders are happy to do ... at a price. In Dana Wallace's case, the price has been handsome. Forty years ago, when he first got married, he began buying beachfront property. The four or five houses he now rents out to the tourists are enough to support him. For years, too, he took photos of the summer people on the dunes ... family portraits. With his professional eye for composition and his native's feel for the terrain, the pictures rose far above the level of the family album. Dana Wallace taking pictures of your kids? It was like Picasso coming in and painting your living room. The public went for it in a big way, and many island end tables are still adorned with the dreamy, silver-lit portraits, "DW" scrawled in the corner. So Wallace has given to the summer people, as well as taken from them. He remains grateful to them not just for their dollars, but for the breath of the city they bring, the grain of culture, and the fast life without which his island world would be too bleak.

Still, he's glad to see them go. September on Fire Island is God's time. The streets and beaches are empty, and the ocean has heated to a tepid bath. The bluefish are beginning their great fall run to the South, and the striped bass won't be far behind. The sky is filling with birds, not just the gulls, terns, cormorants, and kingfishers that always dominate the seaward vista, but great caravans of migrant songbirds and plovers on their way from Canada to the sunny Central American forests and plateaus where they will winter; hawks and black-billed skimmers who live and nest on the island and now must cheat south a few more degrees of latitude to find winter food; and great squadrons of waterfowl, geese and ducks who have begun to abandon the tundra and frozen lakes of the North and will make Fire Island their winter home. All the low island bushes droop with fruit — the juicy purple beach plum, the inkberry, the bearberry, the cranberry, the rose hip, the bayberry. Even the stately holly tree sparkles with the bright red berries of early autumn.

It is a time of rest and of plenty. To be here in September, to bob in the warm ocean and watch the Indian summer sky, to squeeze a lemon over a broiled bluefish, to sweeten your bread with a spoonful of beach plum jam, to make love by an early harvest moon as snow geese path beneath it ... this is what accrues to the islander when the tourists are gone.

Wallace rinses his cocktail glass and sets it to drain on his windowsill. The sky is fat with rain clouds, so he has decided on a fast trip to the village to get his mail. The weather makes a difference when you think about a trip out here, even the half-mile jaunt Dana contemplates into Ocean Beach, because there are no cars.

No cars.

Oh, the tradesmen, the construction men, the telephone and electrical linemen, have vans to transport themselves and their equipment along the thirty-mile length of beach. Most of the year-round residents have four-wheel drive vehicles so they can go shopping or keep from going stir-crazy, when the boats aren't running, by driving down the beach and over the only bridge that connects them to the mainland. But by and large there are no cars, and it is this fact that makes addicts of Fire Islanders, that brings them back year after year, that uncurls their nerves and dismantles, temporarily, their anxieties.

It is impossible to calculate, describe, or imagine the tranquility of life without the automobile. When a stranger first arrives here he knows something is different, but he can't say just what. He walks down the narrow, shaded walkways awhile, and then it hits him. The human being is king here. There's nothing to watch out for. Oh, an occasional bike might jostle you off the road, and a ten-year-old may careen recklessly down a slope on a red wooden wagon, but they will not intimidate you the way the steaming grill of a car will, even idling at a stoplight. There is nothing big and fast and metal to dominate the pace and sounds and smells of life. There is nothing louder than birdsong, or more pungent than the brine. There is nothing bigger and faster than you.

Wallace gets on his bike, an old Schwinn with no brakes, and heads for town. The well laid-out walkways offer a smorgasbord of architecture. Here is an old dormered Cape house, there a modern glass-and-steel box, beyond that an Adirondacks bungalow. In many of them there is activity, even though their owners have gone home or begun to limit their visits to weekends. Autumn is the time for reconstruction. Workers swarm over houses like bees. It is an ideal time to put on a roof, to slap some mortar on an old chimney, to build a new one. The people who own these houses, for the most part, are rich New Yorkers who want things done right, for their own comfort or for the rental value of the house. It is not unknown for a house to go for twenty-five thousand dollars just for the summer season. The roof can't leak for that kind of money. The construction workers are well paid because the traffic will bear it and because their wages must absorb, off the top, ferry fare to and from the mainland everyday. Everything costs more on an island.

As Wallace pedals past a new house under construction, a couple of workers on a roof wave to him, even though they don't really know him. Dana Wallace is a legend on Fire Island, particularly among these bandannaed young men who swing hammers for a living, and see themselves as marauders and soldiers of fortune. Many of them, of course, are not. In a couple of years they will settle into very predictable lives, if they haven't already. But there is something about swinging a hammer under that high sky, beside the pounding ocean, that makes you feel free. And it's well known among these young men that whatever Dana Wallace is or isn't, he is free. He does whatever he damn well pleases, no matter what kind of a price he's had to pay in loneliness, fluctuating fortunes, or friction with the law. On this last point, particularly, Dana Wallace is a model for the young marauder. There is authority all over the place on Fire Island — federal authority.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Dark Wind by John Jiler. Copyright © 1993 John Jiler. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Title Page,
Copyright Notice,
Dedication,
Acknowledgments,
Epigraphs,
Part I: Whispers,
Part II: Roars,
Epilogue: Murmurs,
Afterword: Echoes,
Copyright,

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