About
The Storm Council is a historical fiction series built on a singular premise: the storms are an ancient civilization. They observe, measure, and remember. Through the Council’s archive, each volume revisits a defining American hurricane event, including Galveston 1900, Miami 1926, Okeechobee 1928, and Labor Day 1935. The storms do not judge; they record what human systems reveal under pressure: where confidence outruns preparation, where infrastructure fails, and where adaptation remains incomplete. Grounded in documented history and meteorological reality, the series uses anthropomorphic narrative to examine disaster, policy, and institutional memory from a perspective with no political stake in the outcome. The result is immersive storytelling with analytical depth for general readers, educators, and emergency management professionals.